Bangkok Post

Will Covid-19 make gender pay gap worse?

Women earn about a fifth less than men

- CHRISTINE MURRAY THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION

MEXICO CITY: Advances in closing the worldwide gender pay gap are at risk of being reversed by the coronaviru­s, experts and advocates warn, as women take time off work to care for others and the low-paid sectors they dominate cut back hours and staff.

Women earn about a fifth less money than men around the world, reflecting factors from motherhood and employment in lower-wage jobs to stereotype­s in promotion decisions, according to the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on (ILO).

The wage gap has been narrowing, but at the current rate it could still take 70 years to reach gender parity, according to UN Women.

The gap could increase this year as women are likely to be disproport­ionately affected by home responsibi­lities in quarantine and see their lower-wage jobs disappear, said Anita Bhatia, assistant Secretary General and deputy executive director of the United Nations’ women’s agency.

“Women will end up bearing a big brunt,” she said. “We have a lot of very supportive men in society but not enough, and we really need to work on the gender biases or the stereotype­s that prevent equal sharing of care.”

In Organisati­on for Economic CoOperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) nations, which are mostly developed countries in Europe, the gender pay gap fell to almost 13% in 2017 from nearly 18% in 2000.

PayScale, a Seattle-based maker of compensati­on software, said the US gap has narrowed in recent years, but coronaviru­s could have the opposite effect as women are forced to take time off.

“This has the possibilit­y ... that we could easily reverse that trend,” said Sudarshan Sampath, the company’s research director.

PayScale said it has found when women return to work after taking time off, they receive compensati­on offers that are on average 7% lower than other candidates for the same position.

In the United States, Tuesday is Equal Pay Day, symbolisin­g how far into the year the average woman must work to earn what the average man earned in the previous year.

The economic crisis caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic could result in more than 25 million job losses, according to the ILO.

Catalyst, a US non-profit, said research shows when companies downsize, diversity becomes secondary, with women and people of colour suffering the most.

The group’s Canada director Tanya van Biesen said she feared progress made in recent decades could be lost because hard-hit sectors like hospitalit­y and travel have large female workforces.

“I am so afraid that this health crisis and ultimately economic crisis will cause us to lose the many gains that women at work have made,” van Biesen told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

In a bid to ease paperwork for businesses at a time of economic pressure, Britain’s government said they will not have to make their annual reports on their gender pay gaps this year.

But Sam Smethers, head of the British non-profit Fawcett Society, said the one positive outcome for women with family responsibi­lities might be the normalisat­ion of remote and flexible working.

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