Belfast Telegraph

Female staff atHSBCare earning 60% lessthanme­n

- BY JOSIE CLARKE

HSBC has unveiled a yawning gender pay gap among its UK staff, with female workers earning nearly 60% less than men.

Figures from Europe’s biggest bank showed a gap in average hourly pay of 59% last year, making it one of the worst offenders in the UK banking industry.

The gulf was even more stark when focusing on bonuses alone.

On this measure, awards to male workers were 86% higher than those for women.

HSBC said it had fewer females in senior roles, despite women accounting for 54% of its total UK workforce.

Only 23% of the bank’s top staff in the UK are women.

Elaine Arden, HSBC’s group head of human resources, said: “We are confident in our approach to pay and if we identify any pay difference­s between men and women in similar roles, which cannot be explained by reasons such as performanc­e/behaviour rating or experience, we make appropriat­e adjustment­s.”

HSBC circulated the informatio­n in an internal memo yesterday ahead of a Government deadline of April 4 when all organisati­ons with 250 staff or more are expected to publish their gender pay gap figures.

On a median basis — which takes the middle number from a list of the lowest and highest values — HSBC’s hourly gender pay gap and bonus gap was 29% and 61% respective­ly.

While the Government move is to highlight the pay gulf between the sexes, it is different from equal pay which tackles the difference between men and women doing the same job.

More than 1,000 organisati­ons have published gender pay gap figures, with Government data showing around three in four are paying male employees more than female colleagues.

 ??  ?? Adjustment­s: Elaine Arden
Adjustment­s: Elaine Arden

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