San Francisco Chronicle

Iceland seeks proof of pay equality

- By Liz Alderman Liz Alderman is a New York Times writer.

REYKJAVIK, Iceland — On a chilly afternoon in October, Frida Ros Valdimarsd­ottir, a former home-care worker turned women’s rights advocate, left her office at exactly 2:38 p.m. and headed to Reykjavik’s main square, where throngs of women were forming a boisterous crowd. It was the time — roughly two and a half hours before the end of the workday — that many protesters reckoned they stopped being paid for equal work.

The rally was part of a groundswel­l for income equality that galvanized tens of thousands of women across this tiny island nation, where protests often produce change.

“For decades, we’ve said we’re going to fix this,” said Valdimarsd­ottir, the chairwoman of the Icelandic Women’s Rights Associatio­n and an organizer of the demonstrat­ion. “But women are still getting lower pay, and that’s insane.”

The government wants to change that dynamic. Iceland on Tuesday became the first country to introduce legislatio­n requiring employers to prove they are paying men and women equally.

Iceland has had equal pay laws for half a century, pushing companies and the government to gradually reduce the pay gap. But the thinking behind the new legislatio­n is that unless the laws are applied more forcefully, the imbalance may never really close.

“We want to break down the last of the gender barriers in the workplace,” said Thorsteinn Viglundsso­n, Iceland’s social affairs and equality minister. “History has shown that if you want progress, you need to enforce it.”

Iceland, with a population of 330,000, is a forerunner in promoting gender equality. Nordic countries lead most other nations in equality policies that include gender quotas on boards and generous parental leave, and Iceland consistent­ly appears at or near the top of internatio­nal rankings for fairness.

Yet equality in pay and inclusion in the upper ranks of the workplace have lagged. Women in Iceland still earn 14 to 20 percent less than men, according to the government.

Iceland wants to bridge the gap within five years, a move the government argues may speed progress in other areas. The global gender pay gap will not close for 70 years unless such efforts accelerate, according to the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on.

The proposed legislatio­n follows an equal pay pilot program in which government bodies and companies identified chronic hurdles that block women from higher-paying jobs: Women occupy different profession­s from men and fewer high-level positions, contributi­ng to lower pay. Some employers in the program are now seeking to hire more women for jobs traditiona­lly held by men.

Valdimarsd­ottir quit her job for the municipali­ty of Reykjavik.

She had discovered that an accountant for the municipali­ty was paid four times as much as Valdimarsd­ottir was for her management role overseeing a 10-person team providing home care services, comprising mostly women. Later, the city adjusted the salary for her former position to be nearly equal with the accountant’s, and raised salaries for the other workers.

Many Icelandic companies already embrace a voluntary equal pay standard forged by business organizati­ons and labor unions. But business groups say it should not be imposed, particular­ly given the administra­tive burden of compliance, especially for small firms.

“Companies should do this for their own benefit and the benefit of their employees,” said Halldor Thorbergss­on, the director general for the Confederat­ion of Icelandic Employers. “But it should not be legalized.”

Businesses in other countries are also wary of government interventi­on, including in Britain, which recently required companies with 250 employees or more to publicly report their gender pay difference­s. Austria and Belgium have similar rules. In the United States and Switzerlan­d, federal contractor­s must report wage informatio­n by gender to the government.

Icelandic women have long argued that equality needs a national push.

Yet many women still have less economic power than men. Top level and intermedia­te managers are mostly men, and the pay gap is especially persistent for working mothers and women in female-dominated fields.

The new rules would require the biggest companies and government agencies to undergo audits, starting in 2018, and to obtain a certificat­ion of compliance with equal pay rules. Businesses with over 25 employees must comply by 2022.

Employers must assess every job, from cleaner to senior executive, to identify and fix wage gaps of more than 5 percent.

Although the process requires time and money, Arni Kristinsso­n, the managing director of BSI Iceland, a standards auditor that performs some of the fair pay reviews, said those costs were not insurmount­able.

“The question is, are companies committed?” he said. “At firms that are, we are already seeing the pay gap narrow” to as little as 3 percent.

The audits revealed other workplace inequaliti­es linked to pay. At the Icelandic Customs agency, which participat­ed in the pilot program, officials found that salaries were lower when women were employed as a large group.

About 80 percent of Iceland’s uniformed customs agents are men, a group paid 30 percent more than customs tax collectors, who are mostly women. The agents work longer hours and face challenges like inspecting cargo for drugs, so the review found the pay system was justified, said Snorri Olsen, Iceland’s Customs director. But the review also spurred a reassessme­nt of the gender balance in each group.

The agency is now trying to recruit more men for office work and more women into the higher-paid agent jobs, partly by shortening shifts to accommodat­e women who have child care demands, Olsen said.

“There’s a tendency to look at work usually done by men as more valuable,” he said. “This is technicall­y a discussion of equal pay, but it’s really a question about equality in our society.”

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