Bangkok Post

Parliament to make equal pay the law

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STOCKHOLM: Iceland’s parliament on Tuesday presented a bill that would require public and private businesses to prove they offer equal pay to employees, in what would be the first such requiremen­t in the world.

“The bill entails that companies and institutio­ns of a certain size, 25 or more employees, undertake a certificat­ion of their equal-pay programmes, Thorsteinn Viglundsso­n, minister of social affairs and equality, said.

Iceland ranks first on the World Economic Forum’s 2015 Global Gender Gap Index. But the new law aims to close a 7% wage gap between men and women in the island nation of more than 323,000 people, Mr Viglundsso­n said.

It has the support of both Iceland’s centre-right coalition government as well as the opposition — and nearly 50% of the lawmakers in Parliament are women. The law would take effect from January. “The gender pay gap is unfortunat­ely a fact in the Icelandic labour market and it’s time to take radical measures. We have the knowledge and the processes to eliminate it,” he said.

The law would require private companies and government agencies to go through audits and receive certificat­ion that equal pay is provided, or they could face fines.

“In regard to annual financial statements there are fines if documents are not delivered and I can see the same apply if an equal-pay certificat­ion has not been implemente­d, since it will be an obligation,” Mr Viglundsso­n said.

He said the law was “burdensome” but that “the benefits are at the same time obvious”. Managers and companies that have undertaken the procedure have been “positive” because they have found it “beneficial to go systematic­ally through pay decisions in their sections”, Mr Viglundsso­n said.

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