Power moved over the globe this year as ladies split new roofs and tumbled from places of intensity. We’ve seen another class of problematic pioneers getting through to join the rundown. Be that as it may, we likewise observe various ladies at the best whose control is being tested or who are venturing down. The center is the place it gets fascinating. Ladies are making progress and outlining the course to break out and storm the corner office, or their own office, in more prominent positions.
At no time has all the more light been shone on ladies pioneers and the requirement for greater decent variety. From #MeToo to #TimesUp to ‘We Too’, a term most as of late used to portray the ascent of ladies’ voices in the United Nations this year, ladies are preparing for change. The ladies on Forbes fifteenth yearly Most Powerful Women list are among the hardest, sharpest pioneers the world has today. They are making answers for a portion of the world’s most concerning issues and making their imprint.
So who is the most powerful woman in the world? All in all, who took, clutched or lost power in 2018?
German Chancellor Angela Merkel holds the best spot on the rundown for the eighth year in succession. While she as of late ventured down as leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and isn’t running for re-appointment in 2021, her initiative of Europe’s biggest economy makes her the defacto female pioneer of the free world. While the following three years will be set apart with vulnerability, she likely could be less an intermediary than a pioneer resolved to leave an inheritance. With her future chose, she can center the persistence she showed in exploring monetary and political disturbance on mending the fractures and making an increasingly coordinated EU.
Below is the list of top 10 powerful women of the world of 2018-19
1. Angela Merkel, Chancellor of Germany
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2. Theresa May, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
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3. Christine Lagarde, Managing Director at IMF
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4. Mary Barra, General Motors Chairperson and CEO at General Motors
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5. Abigail Johnson, Chairman and CEO of Fidelity Investments
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6. Melinda Gates, Cochair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
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7. Susan Wojcicki, CEO of YouTube
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8. Ana Botin, Chairman of Banco Santander SA
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9. Marillyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin
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10. Ginni Rometty, CEO of IBM
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