The Scotsman

Tackling ethnic pay gap could bring £24bn boost

- Comment Susannah Donaldson

“As with gender pay gap monitoring, the time has come to tackle the ethnicity pay gap,” RBS chief executive Ross Mcewan said recently, adding that greater diversity within businesses boosts shareholde­r value. This pledge to put racewage disparity under the spotlight comes as the government announced that UK employers could be required to publish data on their pay gaps for workers from different ethnic background­s.

A consultati­on has been launched to gather views from employers about the best approach to ethnicity pay reporting, noting that few businesses currently publish this informatio­n voluntaril­y. It will will ask what employers should publish in order to allow for “decisive action” on workplace diversity, without placing undue burdens on businesses. Prime Minister Theresa May announced the consultati­on on the first anniversar­y of the government’s Race Disparity Audit, which sought to establish how people of different background­s are treated. This exercise found significan­t disparitie­s in the pay and progressio­n of employees from black and minority ethnic (BAME) background­s when compared to their white colleagues.

In her government-commission­ed independen­t review “Race in the Workplace”, which made the business and moral cases for developing BAME talent in the workplace, Baroness Mcgregor-smith recommende­d that businesses with more than 50 employees be required to publish ethnic pay data. However, only 11 per cent of employers surveyed by business body Business in the Community (BITC) are currently collecting this sort of data.

According to Mcgregor-smith, tackling ethnicity-related barriers to workplace participat­ion and progressio­n could boost the UK economy by £24 billion annually, or 1.3 per cent of GDP. The government has, however, stressed in its new consultati­on that tackling inequality of opportunit­y in the workplace is not just about the economy, but about social justice.

However, measuring the ethnicity pay gap is more complex than measuring the gender pay gap, as there are multiple ethnic groups with different gaps, and many people with mixed ethnicity.

According to the government, the new consultati­on will seek to develop a consistent methodolog­ical approach to pay data reporting “which drives meaningful action while remaining proportion­ate and without adding undue burdens on businesses”. The consultati­on proposes a number of different approaches to reporting: a single pay gap figure comparing average hourly earnings of ethnic minority employees as a percentage of white employees; or more granular figures which compare the average hourly earnings of different ethnic groups. It also raises the possibilit­y of reporting ethnicity pay informatio­n by pay band or quartile, similar to the requiremen­ts already in place for gender pay gap reporting.

Contextual factors, such as geographic­al, gender or age variations, could also form part of the informatio­n that is reported, as could narrative informatio­n or action plans to address any disparitie­s identified by data.

Alongside the consultati­on, the government announced a new “Race at Work Charter”, developed in conjunctio­n with BITC. Businesses that adopt the charter commit themselves to various principles and actions designed to encourage recruitmen­t and progressio­n of ethnic minority employees. Public sector employees, including the NHS, armed forces, schools and police, have also committed to publishing plans to increase the proportion of senior staff from ethnic minority background­s.

Baroness Mcgregor-smith, who headlined her 2017 report “The time for talking is over. Now is the time to act”, must take some comfort at these developmen­ts in addressing the ethnicity pay gap in UK society. Susannah Donaldson, employment law expert at Pinsent Masons

Businesses with

more than 50 employees may need to publish ethnic pay data

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