Goldman taps former Harvard prez as third woman for board

Bloomberg

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. tapped former Harvard University president Drew Faust as a director, making her the third woman on an expanded 12-member board.
Faust, 70, starts as an independent director this month after an 11-year tenure at Harvard, the New York-based bank said in a statement. She will be a part of the governance, public responsibilities and risk committees.
Goldman Sachs, like other Wall Street institutions, has uneven representation on its board, with men outnumbering women. State Street Corp., one of the largest Goldman Sachs shareholders, mounted a campaign last year that pledged to vote against companies that don’t have women on their boards. Goldman Sachs has a history of naming to its board women who served as college presidents.
That includes Ruth Simmons, the former president of Brown University, and Debora Spar, a previous president of Barnard College in New York. Both currently aren’t on the bank’s board.

Faust also joins the board at a critical time as speculation mounts over when Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein will relinquish his role at the firm.

Blankfein has a double degree from the school, college and law school. Each of his three children are alumni of Harvard college, and two have graduate degrees.

“Her perspective and experience running one of the most complex and preeminent institutions in the world will benefit our board, our firm and our shareholders,” Blankfein said about Faust in the statement.

Faust, who was the first woman to lead Harvard, stepped down after a run marked by record fundraising. She’s an author and Civil War historian, who succeeded Larry Summers, an economist and former U.S. Treasury Secretary, as the leader of Harvard. She will continue to teach at Harvard.

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