“…Our review found that while IB scholars have briefly noted this point (e.g., Sparrow & Budhwar, 1997;Thams et al, 2013;Varma et al, 2006), other scholars have given it more attention. For example, researchers have found that management teams and boards of directors of publicly listed Indian firms have high caste homogeneity (Ajit et al, 2012;Bhagavatula, Bhalla, Goel, & Vissa, 2019;Bhattacharya et al, 2022;Dayanandan et al, 2019), with one study showing that nearly 70% of Indian corporate boards had a Blau index of caste diversity of zero (Ajit et al, 2012); and that across all listed Indian firms, 90% of board positions are occupied by two caste groups (Brahmins and Vysyas) who are estimated to form about 7% of the Indian population. Research found that caste homogeneity among upper echelons has a negative effect on firm value (Bhagavatula et al, 2019;Dayanandan et al, 2019), in a way that parallels patterns that have been observed with respect to homogeneity on other demographic attributes as well (Carter et al, 2003).…”