The Asian Age

UK moves to bridge gender inequality

Companies will be required to report gender pay gap under new law

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London, April 6 : Britain has become one of the first countries to require large firms to report pay discrepanc­ies between male and female employees under a law that came into effect on Thursday — as part of a push to promote gender equality in the workplace.

The pay gap between British men and women is at a record low, the government said, with women earning 18 per cent less than men in the UK in 2016.

Closing Britain’s pay gap could add £150 billion to the country’s annual gross domestic product by 2025, according to consulting firm McKinsey Global Institute.

The new regulation­s will cover companies with at least 250 workers — which equates to more than 15 million employees or almost half of Britain’s workforce, the government said.

Employers must also reveal pay gaps in bonus payments and publish the proportion of male and

Qfemale staff across each salary bracket, among other requiremen­ts.

“We have more women in work, more women-led businesses than ever before and the highest proportion of women on the boards of our biggest companies,” said minister for women and equalities Justine Greening in a statement.

“This has helped us to narrow the gender pay gap to a record 18.1 per cent, but we want to eliminate it completely.”

Other countries to introduce mandatory gender pay gap reporting include Australia, which passed similar legislatio­n in 2012, and Germany, where a forthcomin­g law will affect companies that have more than 500 employees.

The government said the new law was part of a longer term scheme to support women in the workplace, including investing £5 million pounds to help parents return to work, providing 30 hours of free childcare, and introducin­g shared parental leave.

Women’s rights group Fawcett Society said they “strongly welcome” the gender pay gap reporting legislatio­n.

“Employers should see it as an opportunit­y not a threat. Through gender pay gap reporting they can address the productivi­ty gap and get the best person for the job at the right level,” Sam Smethers, chief executive of Fawcett Society said in a statement.

A parliament­ary committee in February said Britain will fail to close the pay gap within a generation as promised without more flexible working, paternal leave, and encouragin­g women aged over 40 back to work.

On Wednesday, parliament’s business, energy and industrial strategy (BEIS) committee said that companies should publish pay ratios annually, give workers a seat on the committee that sets pay and have women make up half of all new senior and executive level appointmen­ts from 2020.

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