Deccan Chronicle

EU to bar employers from asking candidates’ pay

- AOIFE WHITE

Employers may be prevented from quizzing job candidates on their current earnings under European Union rules that aim to help women secure higher pay, EU Equality Commission­er Helena Dalli said.

"If it happens, it would be a form of discrimina­tion. We are saying it shouldn't happen. The candidate can report this," she told reporters ahead of the Thursday publicatio­n of draft rules on pay transparen­cy. "Previous pay has no bearing on skills and the abilities of the applicant for work and that's why we believe this must not be revealed if the employee does not want to."

The European Commission is proposing binding pay transparen­cy legislatio­n to help close a pay gap that sees women paid 14.1 per cent less than men across the 27nation bloc. The proposals are subject to potential amendments and approval by EU government­s and the European

Parliament before they become law applying throughout the EU.

Candidates should have the right to ask prospectiv­e employers for pay informatio­n under the proposal "which aims at empowering workers in the negotiatio­ns on pay," Dalli told reporters. Exposing pay informatio­n will help women see if they are being paid fairly for the same work, regulators say, and may help equality advocates and trade unions seek compensati­on for pay discrimina­tion.

Women have been hit badly by the pandemic, she said, since many are in precarious employment. The pay transparen­cy rules are only "one tiny move" in larger efforts to help women gain equal pay, including efforts for men to take more leave for child-rearing. Women's reduced hours or maternity leave can hit their pension contributi­ons. Women receive pensions that are 30 per cent lower on average.

The EU's proposal requires government­s to set penalties, including fines, at a level they think will be effective, if companies aren't supplying informatio­n on potential pay gaps. Large firms with more than 250 employees should publish informatio­n on the pay to female and male workers and supply more detailed informatio­n to their staff. Smaller firms will be required to supply pay informatio­n at a worker's request.

The rules cover basic salary, bonuses, overtime, pensions and travel and housing allowances. The proposal isn't asking for women to be paid the same as men but that any pay difference­s must be based on clear criteria.

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