Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Top German labor court boosts equal pay procedure for women

Germany's top labor court has ruled for a woman who was paid less than her male colleagues, ruling that the burden falls on her employer to prove that the disparity is not based on gender.

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The executive, who managed a department within a public insurer in Hanover, had used Germany's relatively new pay-transparen­cy law, which requires employers to disclose male colleagues' wages or salaries.

The Federal Labor Court ruled that her earning €1,006 ($1,218) less per month than the median compensati­on, in terms of basic salaries and bonuses, of six male colleagues in comparable positions was an indicator of gender discrimina­tion.

Furthermor­e, BAG placed the burden of proof on employers to show that gender was not the factor behind a woman's lower pay.

The case now goes back to Hanover's regional labor court, where the insurer, facing the presumptio­n of gender discrimina­tion, can still argue that other factors, such as training and experience, had led to the men's higher compensati­on.

The employer is the Landschaft­liche Brandkasse Hannover, a public insurer that started in the farming sector in the 18th century.

Statistics of recent years show that women in Germany earn about 20% less than their male counterpar­ts.

Simplifies procedure

The acting head of Germany's federal anti- discrimina­tion agency, Bernard Franke, said the ruling would simplify proceeding­s in equal-pay cases by putting the burden of proof on employers.

Germany's 2017 transparen­cy law allows an individual employee within a firm of more than 200 personnel to require employers to calculate the median pay from a comparable group of at least six similarly qualified colleagues of the other gender.

ipj/msh (epd, dpa, AFP)

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 ??  ?? Despite narrowing gradually, gender pay discrepanc­ies in Germany persist
Despite narrowing gradually, gender pay discrepanc­ies in Germany persist

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