The Citizen (KZN)

‘Obscene’ UK gender pay gaps

MEN CONTINUE TO DOMINATE THE HIGHEST PAID JOBS IN BRITAIN, SAYS STUDY Reporting by all businesses with more than 50 employees is now in place.

- London

More UK businesses should be made to report the difference in how much they pay male and female staff, lawmakers said yesterday, citing “obscene” gender pay gaps in some companies.

Businesses and charities with more than 250 workers must publish figures on their gender pay gap each year under a law introduced last year, but they account for less than half Britain’s workforce.

Yesterday a parliament­ary committee said smaller businesses tend to be more unequal, urging government to extend the reporting requiremen­t to all firms with more than 50 employees.

“Companies are failing to harness fully the talents of half the population,” said Rachel Reeves chairperso­n of the business and industrial strategy committee.

The first round of reporting completed this year helped to shine a light on how men dominate the highest paid jobs in Britain, the committee said.

Yet more has to be done to bridge the country’s pay gap – one of the largest in Europe, it said.

“Our analysis found that some companies have obscene and entirely unacceptab­le gender pay gaps of more than 40%,” said Reeves.

The committee said the government should require companies to publish a blueprint to address discrepanc­ies in salary and report annually on their progress.

This year only 5% set themselves a target, it said.

“We have to move on from simply reporting the pay gap, to taking action to close it,” said Sam Smethers, the head of women’s rights group, the Fawcett Society.

As in many other countries, gender pay inequality has been a persistent problem in Britain despite sex discrimina­tion being outlawed in the 1970s, and has sparked a public debate in recent years over why wages are still so different for men and women.

The overall gender pay gap in Britain stands at 18.4%, according to government data published last year.

But for more than one in 10 large businesses the gap is higher than 30%. “Employers have to adjust to the increasing need for flexible working and champion policies that enable caring responsibi­lities to be shared equally between women and men,” said Niki Kandirikir­ira of campaign group Equality Now.

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