Eastern Eye (UK)

INDIA BATS FOR GENDER PARITY

Cricket board’s decision to pay women cricketers same match fees as men hailed

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INDIA’S internatio­nal women cricketers will be paid the same match fees as the men, its cricket board said last Thursday (27), hailing a “new era of gender equality” in the nation’s favourite sport.

The announceme­nt by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) follows pressure across sport globally to reduce the often vast difference­s in pay.

Match fees are, however, separate from annual pay packets, where there are enormous difference­s between what the Indian men and their women counterpar­ts earn.

“We are implementi­ng pay-equity policy for our contracted @BCCIWomen cricketers,” BCCI secretary Jay Shah tweeted, calling it the “first step towards tackling discrimina­tion”.

“The match fee for both men and women cricketers will be same as we move into a new era of gender equality in cricket,” Shah added.

Despite some progress, India remains a highly traditiona­l and patriarcha­l society and has far fewer women in formal employment than men.

Men and women players will now get `1.5 million rupees (£15,615) for each Test, `600,000 (£6,293) for one-day internatio­nals and `300,000 (£3,146) for T20 internatio­nals.

According to media reports, it is an almost four-fold increase for women for Test matches, a six-fold rise for ODIs and three times higher for a T20.

India’s men will still earn considerab­ly more overall because of their higher annual retainers and the fact they play many more matches every year than the women. For the 2020-21 season, contracts for the top-graded men such as superstar Virat Kohli were worth around `70 million, according to previous BCCI announceme­nts.

This is almost 14 times what women get in the highest bracket.

India’s women players, like their male counterpar­ts in the cricket-crazy country of 1.4 billion people, are among the world’s best. The team claimed an ODI series whitewash in England in September and are expected to be major contenders for next year’s women’s T20 World Cup.

Last week’s announceme­nt came ahead of the reported debut next year of a women’s version of the lucrative Indian Premier League (IPL) Twenty20 tournament.

Former Indian women’s captain Mithali Raj called the pay announceme­nt a “historic decision for women’s cricket in India”. Coupled with the women’s IPL, “we are ushering in a new era for women’s cricket in India... really happy today”, she tweeted.

Cheteshwar Pujara, a star of the Indian men’s team, called it a “great step... towards uplifting women’s cricket in India and setting an example for the world to follow”.

Former men’s player Harbhajan Singh tweeted that it “set a standard for other sports bodies. It will encourage greater participat­ion of women in the game.”

In July, New Zealand’s women cricketers similarly won the right to the same match fees as men. Australia’s women cricketers last year got a pay rise, but Cricket Australia CEO Nick Hockley admitted there was still a “really big gap” compared to their male colleagues.

Earlier this year, it was announced that the United States’ men’s and women’s national football teams would receive equal pay following years of pressure from women players.

But in other sports, huge pay difference­s persist. In the Forbes 2022 list of highest-paid athletes worldwide, all of the top 10 are men.

 ?? ?? is published by Garavi Gujarat Publicatio­ns Ltd, Garavi Gujarat House, No 1 Silex Street, London, SE1 0DW. Tel: 020-7928 1234; Fax: 020-7261 0055; Website: www.easterneye.biz. Registered as a newspaper at the Post Office.*
is published by Garavi Gujarat Publicatio­ns Ltd, Garavi Gujarat House, No 1 Silex Street, London, SE1 0DW. Tel: 020-7928 1234; Fax: 020-7261 0055; Website: www.easterneye.biz. Registered as a newspaper at the Post Office.*
 ?? ?? HISTORIC DECISION: The Indian women’s team won the ODI series against Engla in t e summer; and (inset left) Mithali Raj
© Ryan Pierse/Getty Images
HISTORIC DECISION: The Indian women’s team won the ODI series against Engla in t e summer; and (inset left) Mithali Raj © Ryan Pierse/Getty Images

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