Hartford Courant

EU leader seeks transparen­cy to help close gender pay gap

- By Raf Casert

BRUSSELS — The European Union executive wants to force employers to be much more open about how much their staff earn to make it easier for women to challenge wage imbalances and close the gender pay gap.

Even though the gender pay gap across the 27-nation bloc has been reduced to 14% for people doing the same work, the European Commission wants to eliminate the disparity by imposing specific rules to make pay levels public.

“For equal pay, you need transparen­cy. Women must know whether their employers treat them fairly,” said EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

Since its inception in 1957, the EU has sought to end such gender bias, but progress has been slow over the decades. When it comes to pension rights, reflecting working conditions of the past 30 to 40 years, the gender gap still stands at 30%.

Wage conditions and scales in Europe have long been shrouded in secrecy, which has helped extend inequality and proved to be a hurdle for those demanding pay justice.

And companies have fallen far short in helping bridge the gap, said EU-Vice President Vera Jourova.

“We have sufficient­ly strong evidence that we need to have binding rules and not only to rely on social responsibi­lity of the companies because we see that it doesn’t lead anywhere,” she said.

She said that over the past seven years, the gap had closed only by a little over 2 percentage points.

“You can imagine if we continue like that, we will achieve pay fairness some time in several decades. So we cannot continue like that,” she said.

Under the commission’s proposals, employers would have to give informatio­n about initial pay levels in the vacancy announceme­nt and ahead of the job interview, during which employers will not be allowed to ask about applicants’ previous pay grades.

Employees will be allowed to ask employers the average pay levels by gender for people doing the same work.

And to put more pressure on big companies, the proposal forces firms with more than 250 employees to publish informatio­n about any gender pay gap.

If women remain underpaid, the commission wants them to be able to get back pay, and it wants the burden of proof to be on employers, not the women challengin­g them.

The European Trade Union Confederat­ion lauded the intent but said the proposals lacked teeth to force companies into decisive action.

It complained that small- and medium-size companies, where such discrimina­tion often happens, were excluded from key elements of the enforcemen­t.

The proposal now goes to the European Parliament and EU countries for further discussion before it can be approved.

The EU announceme­nt came ahead of Internatio­nal Women’s Day, which is Monday.

 ?? FRANCISCO SECO/AP2020 ?? Medical staffers tend to a COVID-19 patient Oct. 21 in Liege, Belgium. The EU wants to further close the gender pay gap for people doing the same work.
FRANCISCO SECO/AP2020 Medical staffers tend to a COVID-19 patient Oct. 21 in Liege, Belgium. The EU wants to further close the gender pay gap for people doing the same work.

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