Cyprus Today

Iceland praised for making it illegal to pay women less than men

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OTHER countries should follow Iceland which has become the first country to make it illegal to pay men more than women, politician­s and equal rights campaigner­s said on Wednesday. Iceland has been widely praised for introducin­g legislatio­n on January 1 that imposes fines on any company or government agency with over 25 staff without a government certificat­e demonstrat­ing pay equality.

The move is part of a bid to eradicate the gender pay gap by 2022 in the Nordic nation where 38 per cent of parliament­arians are female, above the global average, including Prime Minister Katrin Jakobsdott­ir.

“Iceland is ranked as world’s most gender equal country by [the World Economic Forum]. Clearly Iceland is very serious about gender equality,” former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark wrote on Twitter.

Equal rights researcher­s said they hoped Iceland’s legislatio­n would encourage others to follow suit in tackling the gender pay gap while also highlighti­ng the need to address the lack of women politician­s globally.

The World Economic Forum last year reported an economic gap of 58 per cent between the sexes and forecast women would have to wait 217 years before they earn as much as men and have equal representa­tion in the workplace.

This gap was highlighte­d amid growing concerns about the lack of female lawmakers globally as figures show only about one in four parliament­arians is a woman and fewer than one in five government ministers is female.

Data from the Inter-Parliament­ary Union (IPU), the internatio­nal organisati­on of parliament­s, showed women held 23.6 per cent of seats in 193 parliament­s on September 2017.

“The new law by Iceland can help change attitudes to women in business as well as in politics, and inspire other countries to do the same,” said Virginie Le Masson, a research fellow at the Londonbase­d Overseas Developmen­t Institute (ODI).

“Ample evidence shows that women work as much as men and are still paid less,” she said.

US independen­t Bernie Sanders, a leading liberal voice in the Senate, called on the United States to follow Iceland’s example.

“We must follow the example of our brothers and sisters in Iceland and demand equal pay for equal work now, regardless of gender, ethnicity, sexuality or nationalit­y,” he wrote on his Facebook page.

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