Iran Daily

Ethnic minority academics earn less than white colleagues in England

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When Meenakshi Sarkar landed a job as a teaching fellow at Leeds University, England, after a successful career in business in India, she was delighted.

But the university put her on the lowest possible academic pay band, leaving her struggling financiall­y, BBC wrote.

It became clear that colleagues were paid more for similar work, leaving her feeling “depressed and devalued.”

“I feel like everyone else is running a 100-meter sprint and I’m running a steeplecha­se alongside them,” she said. “It’s not an equal race.” Sarkar’s frustratio­n is not unusual, according to data obtained by BBC under Freedom of Informatio­n law.

The BBC sent FOI requests to all 24 universiti­es in the Russell Group of highly selective, research-based universiti­es, and 22 responded.

At these universiti­es, the data showed average salaries of: £52,000 for white academics, £38,000 for black academics and £37,000 for academics from an Arab background.

This means that black and Arab academics at the UK’S top universiti­es earn an average 26 percent less than white colleagues.

And female academics fare even worse, with an ethnicity pay gap on top of the gender pay gap.

The pay gap is smaller for other Asian and mixedherit­age academics.

The Russell Group said it was unable to comment on individual universiti­es’ recruitmen­t practices.

But Leeds University said it took the issue “very seriously.”

“This is why we are committed to ensuring that black and minority ethnic staff are employed at all levels and to reducing any pay gap arising from our current representa­tion across the grades.”

Pay gaps can be caused by unequal pay, which is illegal, or by a group of staff tending to be in lower paid jobs or in part-time work.

The new data suggests that ethnic minority academics are less likely than white men or women to be promoted to better paid, senior positions.

They also tend to be in lower pay bands.

The data shows the gender pay gap is more pronounced for ethnic minority women at Russell Group universiti­es where white male staff are on average salaries of £55,000.

On average, compared with white men: White women got 15 percent less, Asian women 22 percent less and black women 39 percent less.

Professor Akwugo Emejulu, of Warwick University, is one of just 26 black women professors in the UK.

She said she attained her current position in the sociology department at Warwick University despite experienci­ng “racist and sexist bullying” throughout her career.

“One of the reasons for the gap is that black women in particular tend to be on temporary teaching-only contracts that trap them in low waged work with few opportunit­ies to move on to permanent positions,” she told the BBC.

The BBC data shows that at Warwick, ethnic minority academics are paid an average 25 percent less than their white colleagues, amounting to over £14,500.

White academics at Warwick receive an average salary of £59,000 but the 215 identifyin­g as Asian get 27 percent less and the 25 black academics earn 39 percent less.

But the university said its own analysis shows the gap is in fact just 15.5 percent although it agrees “there is much room for improvemen­t.”

“We at Warwick are actively looking at the best ways to identify where the barriers are to help us reduce the ethnic minority pay gap.”

The university said the approach is paying off, with 28 percent of its early career academic staff identifyin­g as black or minority ethnic.

Glasgow University employs 72 black academics, the highest of all the universiti­es that responded – but they are paid an average of just under £23,000 or 43 percent less than their white colleagues.

In a statement, Glasgow University said it actively encouraged academics from ethnic minority background­s to work there, adding that the fact that most were in the early part of their careers accounted for the pay gap.

“All black and minority ethnic staff are paid on comparable levels as white colleagues on the same grade.”

The former universiti­es minister and Labour MP for Tottenham, David Lammy, said the figures showed universiti­es needed to “take a look in the mirror and realize that more needs to be done to both widen access at undergradu­ate level and to keep and retain a diverse cohort right through to Phds, professors­hips and the very top of these institutio­ns.”

Across the Russell Group universiti­es that responded, the BBC found that there are:

More than 49,000 White academic staff, three thousand Chinese and East Asian, three thousand Indian and South Asian, just over 600 Black and only 250 from Arab background­s.

Disclosing ethnicity is not mandatory and about one in six academic staff had refused to declare their ethnicity to their employers so their data is not included.

The figures disclosed to the BBC came as the government revealed plans to make ethnicity pay reporting mandatory for companies with more than 250 employees.

 ??  ?? PETER KINDERSLEY/GETTY IMAGES St. Johns College, part of the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, the UK
PETER KINDERSLEY/GETTY IMAGES St. Johns College, part of the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, the UK

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