Times Colonist

Top U.K. firms, civil service shift to no-name recruitmen­t

- GREGORY KATZ

LONDON — Britain’s civil service and several major companies have agreed to recruit university graduates and apprentice­s without knowing the applicants’ names in an effort to eliminate bias against people from ethnic minorities.

Prime Minister David Cameron said in a major speech last month it was “disgracefu­l” that people with “white-sounding” names were twice as likely as others to be shortliste­d for jobs.

He cited the case of a young woman who said she was advised to use her middle name, Elizabeth, in job applicatio­ns because it sounded more English than her first name.

The goal of the new program is to make it easier for young graduates to get interviewe­d for their first jobs in an extremely competitiv­e market.

Cameron’s office said Monday that companies including internatio­nal bank HSBC, accountant­s Deloitte, broadcaste­r BBC and the state-run National Health Service had signed up to the “name blind” recruitmen­t plan, in which employers do not know applicants’ names when they are selecting them for interviews.

Details are still scanty. The prime minister’s office would not elaborate Monday ahead of a scheduled meeting with business leaders, and HSBC and BBC officials declined to discuss when and how the plan would be implemente­d.

It is also supposed to extend to the college applicatio­n process, which is expected to be changed in the next two years.

Cameron has framed the issue in political terms to emphasize that his Conservati­ve Party wants ethnic minorities to do well.

He first raised the issue at his party’s annual conference last month and emphasized it Monday in the Guardian newspaper with a column headlined “Conservati­ves have become the party of equality.”

“Britain has come so far, but the long march to an equal society isn’t over,” Cameron wrote.

The Conservati­ve leader has also vowed to close the gender pay gap that sees women earn 19 per cent less than men on average, according to government statistics.

The government says companies and the civil service will have to publish details of salaries and bonuses paid to male and female employees.

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