AHN
Home  |  News Briefs  |  U.S.  |  World   |  Celeb Buzz  |  Entertainment  |  Sports  |  Business  |  Health  |  Sci / Tech  |  Politics  |  Weird & Offbeat  
--- Advertisment ---

U.K. Bill Seeks To Close Gender Gap In Salaries By Mandating Firms To Publish Their Wages By Sex

January 6, 2009 10:42 a.m. EST

--- Advertisment ---
AHN Staff

London, England (AHN) - A bill pending in the British Parliament would require companies to publish their yearly payrolls with specific data on salaries for male and female employees. The Equality Bill is expected to highlight the gender gap when it comes to salaries.

According to a report published in November by the Office of National Statistics, British men receive 17.1 percent more wages for full-time employment compared to women. The gender gap is 36.6 percent for part-time work.

Based on real terms, the Equality and Human Rights Commission estimated female workers in Britain earn on the average $538,650 (369,000 pound) less during their lifetime than their male counterparts.

If the data would show women workers are earning less, the bill will offer assistance to the firms on how to train and upgrade their female employees. The bills seeks to shame companies that discriminate against female employees in terms of paying them smaller wages for the same work.



Copyright © 2003 - 2009 AHN - All rights reserved.
Redistribution, republication. syndication, rewriting or broadcast is prohibited without the prior written consent of AHN.
License AHN news for your website, business, digital signage network or publication.

Home  |  News Briefs  |  U.S.  |  World  |  Entertainment  |  Sports  |  Business  |  Health  |  Sci / Tech  |  Politics  |  Weird / Offbeat  

© 2009 AHN

Client Login  |  Submit News  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Use  |  Contact  |  Content Services    All Rights Reserved