Cape Times

Global coalition to push for equal pay for women at work

- Maria Sanchez

NEW YORK: One of the most persistent barriers to women’s success at work and to economic growth, unequal pay, will be actively challenged by a new global partnershi­p, the Equal Pay Internatio­nal Coalition (Epic).

With its launch, the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on (ILO), UN Women and the Organisati­on of Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) are bringing together a diverse set of actors at the global, regional and national levels to support government­s, employers and workers and their organisati­ons, and other stakeholde­rs, to make equal pay between women and men for work of equal value a reality.

“One of the most visible, tangible and pervasive manifestat­ions of discrimina­tion is that women across the globe are still being paid less than men for work of equal value.

“That is why this equal pay initiative was developed and why it is a focus area of the ILO’s Women at Work Centenary Initiative. The principle of equal pay for work of equal value is enshrined in the ILO Constituti­on of 1919. One hundred years is too long to wait, and we must all work together to make equal pay for work of equal value a reality,” said Guy Ryder, ILO director-general.

Epic is a global response to a critical problem that has been prioritise­d in the UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, in particular Target 8.5, which calls for equal pay for work of equal value by 2030.

Equal pay, in addition to empowering women, can have a significan­t impact on achieving other key goals, such as promoting inclusive societies, reducing poverty, and creating conditions for decent work and gender equality.

Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, executive director of UN Women, said: “There is no justificat­ion for unequal pay for a woman when her job is of equal value to a man’s. This injustice has been unseen for too long, and together we are changing that. Equal pay for women translates into lifelong benefits for them as well as their families: better career prospects and lifetime earnings, greater independen­ce, and higher investment­s in their children’s education and health.”

Employers and trade unions, as well as other key stakeholde­rs, will have a central role in the applicatio­n and rolling out of equal pay policies. A Platform of Champions, launched earlier this year by UN Women at the Commission on the Status of Women, will also contribute to strengthen­ing advocacy on equal pay, as part of Epic.

A recent ILO-Gallup report, based on a representa­tive survey of 142 countries, shows women and men want women to be in paid jobs, but there remains a range of challenges for women at work, including unequal pay, balancing work and family, lack of access to affordable care and unfair treatment.

OECD secretary-general Angel Gurría noted that “gender inequality has many roots, including flawed policies, discrimina­tory laws and regulation­s, misplaced economic incentives, workplace practices, and social norms and institutio­ns”. He asserted that “it is in our power to make an immediate improvemen­t in the quality of life of hundreds of millions of women and their families if we succeed in delivering equal pay for men and women”.

The issue of equal pay remains high on the UN’s agenda. This year, the UN Secretary-General’s HighLevel Panel for Women’s Economic Empowermen­t released a report that focused on transforma­tive actions needed to advance women’s economic empowermen­t, highlighti­ng the importance of equal pay for work of equal value.

The innovative work of the newly created Epic will contribute significan­tly to challengin­g some of the main assumption­s reinforcin­g unequal pay, which were also highlighte­d by the High-Level Panel and the ILO-Gallup report.

More informatio­n on the Equal Pay Internatio­nal Coalition (Epic) can be accessed at www.ilo.org/epic

Sanchez is a media specialist at UN Women.

 ?? Picture: UN.ORG ?? EQUALITY: With women being paid an average of 23% less than men, the UN has launched a high-profile network to call for equal pay for work of equal value.
Picture: UN.ORG EQUALITY: With women being paid an average of 23% less than men, the UN has launched a high-profile network to call for equal pay for work of equal value.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa