Home UK Large companies are not doing enough to tackle the gender pay gap

Large companies are not doing enough to tackle the gender pay gap

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Nicole Morley

Large companies are not doing enough to tackle the gender pay gap
Firms are not doing enough to tackle the gender pay gap
(Picture: Getty)

Companies are set to break a new law on the gender pay gap before it is even introduced.

Legislation compelling larger firms to publish details of their gender pay gap seems likely to be breached when it comes into force, an expert has warned.

So far, only about one in 20 firms having made public the necessary data so far.

Pedestrians pass the entrance to a Debenhams store on Oxford Street in London, U.K., on Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2012. Debenhams Plc, the U.K.'s second-largest department-store chain, rose the most in more than 2 1/2 years in London trading after holiday sales beat estimates and the retailer said it expects commodity-cost pressure to ease. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesDebenhams opening hours on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day 2018

By early April 2018 all organisations employing 250 or more people are required to declare their gender pay gap – the difference between the average earnings of male and female workers.

With just over three months until the deadline, only 493 of the 9,000 eligible organisations have done so.

Jane Gotts, co-founder of GenAnalytics – a consultancy looking at equality and diversity in business – said it was unlikely that all companies will make the required data public in time.

Ms Gotts said she expected to see a significant increase in companies publishing gender pay gap information in the new year, but with only a few hundred companies having declared so far, she added: ‘I don’t think they all will do it. That would be a monumental fault which I could see happening.’

Large companies are not doing enough to tackle the gender pay gap
(Picture: Getty/Mylo)

Official figures showed that in 2017 that UK’s gender pay gap based on median hourly earnings for full-time employees fell to 9.1% from 9.4% the previous year.

UK Government legislation now requires organisations with 250 or more workers to report annually on any pay gap, with public sector bodies to do this by March 30 2018. The private and voluntary sectors have until April 5.

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Many of the organisations which have published their data already have reported a gender pay gap of 10% to 25% but Ms Gotts said in some firms this rose to more than 50%.

She said: ‘There are many reasons as to why this is the case – culture, lack of flexible working practices at senior levels, recruitment processes, retaining female talent, unconscious bias, to name a few.

‘However, if we are really serious about closing the gender pay gap we need a monumental shift to get more women into senior roles and keep them there.’

There are a ‘few different factors’ for why so many firms have not yet revealed their figures.

More: UK

She said: ‘I don’t think businesses see this as a priority – there are no punitive measures if you don’t publish.

‘Also I think with the current economic climate, and Brexit, there are so many things going on. But companies don’t see it as a business imperative and priority. There appears to be a ‘wait and see’ approach.’

A UK Government spokesman said: ‘Large employers are legally required to report their gender pay gap – this is not an option, it is the law.

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‘Some of our most well-known companies have already reported – including Virgin Money, TSB, Fujitsu and Weetabix – but with just over four months to go we want to see all remaining employers report as soon as possible.

‘It is simply good business sense to recognise the enormous potential of women and to nurture female talent.

‘Only by shining a light on this issue will employers be able to take action to close their gender pay gap, which almost every employer will have – waiting to report won’t change those figures.’

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