The Scotsman

BBC steels itself for gender pay gap questions

● ‘Embarrassi­ng’ revelation­s of male and female talent disparitie­s of pay

- By AMY WATSON

BBC officials are reportedly bracing themselves for a gender pay storm as the corporatio­n prepares to publish a list of its top earners on Wednesday.

The list of 100 top-paid stars is said to have “astounding omissions” revealing a pay disparity between men and women in the same jobs, according to reports in the Sunday Telegraph.

Insiders have warned that the figures will make “very embarrassi­ng” reading for the organisati­on. Companies with more than 250 employees will be required to reveal their gender pay gap by April 2018 under a new legal ruling.

Current estimates put the UK’S gender pay gap at around 18 per cent nationwide. High-profile talent including newsreader­s Huw Edwards, Fiona Bruce and Laura

0 BBC Match of the Day presenter Gary Lineker seen with Gabby Logan, left, and Clare Balding Kuenssberg are expected to feature prominentl­y on the list, while pay details of Match of the Day presenter Gary Lineker, Top Gear’s Chris Evans and chat show host Graham Norton are also expected to be made revealed.

The publicatio­n comes amid calls for improved transparen­cy over the way the corporatio­n spends its yearly £3.7 billion licence fee.

In May 2016, a government white paper ordered the BBC to disclose salary details of stars earning more than the £450,000 a year paid to director-general Tony Hall.

However, Prime Minister Theresa May slashed that figure to £150,000 a year in September, prompting media executives to describe it as a “poachers’ charter,” and claiming it could open the door for rivals to lure away the BBC’S best-paid presenters.

The BBC’S director of content, Charlotte Moore, told last year’s Edinburgh Television Festival: “The outcome could well be that talent fees will go up because if everybody knows what everybody is being paid they will go ‘I want to be paid that’.”

The corporatio­n’s chiefs are now preparing to be grilled by Culture Secretary Karen Bradley, with government sources stating she “cares deeply” about pay disparity.

Culture committee chairman Damian Collins and the chairwoman of the women and equalities committee, Maria Miller, have also pledged to demand answers over pay gaps at the corporatio­n.

Presenter Andrew Marr has insisted that he earns less than a reported £580,000 but said in June that pay revelation­s would be “uncomforta­ble for all of us”.

He added: “I’m well paid but I’m less overpaid than people working for rival organisati­ons who won’t go through this process.”

Some stars will avoid being named on the list due to salaries paid by production companies or BBC Studios, the corporatio­n’s commercial arm.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom