Los Angeles Times

Intel shines an unflatteri­ng light on its disparitie­s

Chipmaker is first firm to disclose an EEOC breakdown of pay, gender and race data.

- By Jeff Green and Hannah Recht

It’s not really a surprise that white and Asian men dominate the top pay tiers among Intel’s U.S. workforce. That’s been true in the tech industry for years. What’s unusual is the excruciati­ng level of detail about pay disparity the chipmaker released Tuesday to the public — informatio­n it could have kept secret.

In addition to its annual update on the outlook for women and people of color at the company, Intel on Tuesday released the results of a new report it sent to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission that gives unpreceden­ted pay, race and gender data for about 51,000 U.S. workers. Intel is the first company to release the otherwise private data.

The results are not flattering. Among 52 top executives at Intel, who all earn more than $208,000 — the top pay band the EEOC tracks — 29 are white men, 11 are Asian men and eight are white women. The tally also includes one Asian woman, one black woman and one black man.

The ratio was similarly skewed across manager, profession­al and technician job classifica­tions, with white and Asian men dominating top pay groups and women and people of color clustered in the lower bands. One in 4 white men at Intel are in the top salary tier, earning at least $208,000, a higher share than any other group. Rates are far lower for women and underrepre­sented minorities; fewer than 10% of black employees are top earners.

“It’s difficult to really fix what you aren’t being transparen­t about,” said Barbara Whye, Intel’s chief diversity and inclusion officer and a vice president in human resources. The chipmaker is making itself “very vulnera

ble,” she said, to “do the right things,” and she hopes her peers will follow and share pay informatio­n too. “These are industrywi­de problems,” Whye said. “They are going to require industrywi­de solutions to resolve them.” So far, no other companies have said they’ll do the same.

Intel joins a small but growing number of companies that have released gender and racial pay data, often under pressure from investors. The transparen­cy may be laudable, but it is often overshadow­ed by what is revealed. Annual diversity reports from the biggest tech companies from the last half a decade have shown scant progress in advancing the numbers of underrepre­sented workers.

Companies that choose to release this kind of informatio­n risk backlash. Citigroup this year faced criticism after it voluntaril­y released median pay data that showed women at the bank earn 29% less than men do.

Intel’s report finds that within job types — not just at the top — white men dominate the highest salary band. Two-thirds of employees fall into a job group called “profession­als,” which includes non-managerial office workers and programmer­s. Nearly all earn at least $80,000 a year, but white and Asian men have the highest salaries. Black, Latino and other minority workers are overrepres­ented in the bottom half of the pay ranges.

Even if the numbers look bad, companies will ultimately benefit more from leading on disclosure than they would from dragging their heels, said Natasha Lamb, managing partner at Arjuna Capital, which pressures companies to disclose gender pay data. The point is not to beat up on organizati­ons for telling the truth, she said. “It’s much more important to have an accurate reflection of reality than to glaze over the simple truth,” she said. “These companies are not as diverse and equal as they could be.”

In 2015, Intel set a goal to have women make up at least 26% of its workforce by 2020. The company met that last year and is working to increase the percentage of women among top executives now to 26% too, Whye said. Intel says representa­tion among its total U.S. workforce and for technical employees has improved — underrepre­sented workers make up 15.8% of the company, up from 14.6% last year. Women as a percentage of the workforce fell slightly to 26.5% from 26.8%.

Intel announced in January that it had met its goal of equal pay for men and women who do the same work. These EEOC data do not measure that.

Overrepres­entation of white men in the highestpay­ing jobs contribute­s to the nation’s wage gap: American women earn 20% less than men do, and the gap is even wider for women of color. Intel’s disclosure shows that these disparitie­s can’t be fixed simply by raising the salaries of women and minorities. Whye said the company’s task is to help underrepre­sented groups get promoted into more lucrative roles and keep them there.

The data provided to the EEOC covered 2017 and 2018 and were collected from nearly all U.S. companies for the first time this fall under an initiative started by President Obama. By law, the forms stay private unless a company makes them public.

This could be the only time the EEOC collects worker pay broken down by race, sex and ethnicity, making Intel’s disclosure a unique window into company compensati­on, and how it results in wage gaps. The agency has been soliciting the data since July and could continue to do so until January under a federal judge’s order. But the EEOC has said it won’t pursue future collection­s in this form.

In Britain, where companies are required to publicly report wage gaps between male and female workers, the disclosure­s have shown the benefits and limits of transparen­cy, said Harini Iyengar, a lawyer who advocates for equal pay in Britain.

“A lot of members of the public who don’t pay an interest generally in labor market issues are quite shocked at the scale of the pay disparity,” she said. “So that’s been very positive because people are genuinely shocked.”

But so far the nationwide initiative has not resulted in measurable change, she said: “What I’m seeing is collective hand-wringing about, ‘Oh no, this is not good enough. But look, everyone else in our industry sectors is in the same boat. So that’s all right then.’ ”

‘It’s difficult to really fix what you aren’t being transparen­t about.’ Barbara Whye, Intel’s chief diversity and inclusion officer

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