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Goldman and GM Among 34 Firms to Share Private Diversity Data

Updated on
  • NYC comptroller and funds sought EEOC race, gender disclosures
  • Companies prodded to follow through after George Floyd’s death
The Renaissance Center, the global headquarters of General Motors, stands in Detroit.

The Renaissance Center, the global headquarters of General Motors, stands in Detroit.

Photographer: Jeff Kowalsky/Bloomberg

More than thirty of the largest U.S. companies have agreed to new disclosures of previously private race, gender and ethnicity workforce data as part of a push by the New York City comptroller and three city retirement funds.

Amazon.com Inc., General Motors Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are among 34 companies that have agreed to share the regulatory filing when they report new numbers next year, Comptroller Scott Stringer said in a statement Monday. Morgan Stanley, PepsiCo Inc., and Coca-Cola Co. have also promised data, the comptroller said. More than a dozen S&P 100 companies already release the detailed form but they are the exception, not the rule.