Women working for nothing until the end of the year.
From Friday 10th November 2017 women start to work for free and what’s more the date has not shifted in the calendar for the past 3 years, demonstrating the lack of progress there has been in closing the pay gap.
This year the Fawcett Society, a leading campaigning charity, has sounded a stark warning that the pay gap is actually widening for some groups of women and it will now take 100 years to close it, based on the current rate of change.
We must all do something to speed up change
The Fawcett Society is calling on everyone to take action to close the pay gap. Government, employers and each of us can and must do something today to address this stark inequality in our workplaces and to speed up change.
Sam Smethers, Fawcett Society Chief Executive said:
The pay gap is widest for older women as it grows over our working lives but we are now seeing a widening of the pay gap for younger women too, which suggests we are going backwards and that is extremely worrying.
“At a time when we are breaking the taboo of talking about sexual harassment in the workplace we need to wake up to the fact that a culture which tolerates or even fosters sexual harassment isn’t going to pay women properly either, and we know that younger women are particularly likely to experience harassment.
The charity also warns:
- Progress has stalled in closing the pay gap. It stands at 14.1% now – the same as it was in 2015 and 2016.
- If the gap closes at the rate it has over the last 5 years it won’t reach 0% until 2117.
- At 18.6% the gap is wider for women in their 50s, but has significantly grown amongst women in their 20s – from 1.1% in 2011 to 5.5% this year.
- The gap is highest in London (20.7%), followed by the South East at 16.3%. It is lowest in Wales, at 8.3%, and the North East at 10.2%. But while it is falling in London and the South East, by over 3 percentage points since 2011, it has risen in the North East by 1.5 percentage points.
- The gap is higher in the private sector, at 17.1% – but it has fallen by 4.3 percentage points since 2011. In the public sector it has stayed flat at just above 14%. Fawcett research published earlier this year found that the mean aggregate pay gap for Pakistani and Bangladeshi women is 26% and for black African women it is 24%.
- Women are almost twice as likely (1.8 times more likely) to receive the lowest pay – with 221,000 women earning less than the statutory minimum wage, 100,000 more women than men.
Action you can take as an employee
- Ask what your colleagues earn – break the taboo of talking about pay as pay secrecy is a great cover for pay inequality
- Ask your employer if they are aware of gender pay gap reporting and when they will publish their data. Ask to see their action plan.