‘We didn’t know how’ is the main excuse for the one in 10UK organisations that have not improvedgenderpay gap, according to a new survey by Young Women’s Trust found published this International Women’s Day.
Up to 30 per cent of the 800 organisations polled admitted they had taken no measures to close the pay gap over the last year. Paying employees different salaries on the grounds of gender is illegal.
In April 2018, it was made mandatory for companies who employ upwards of 250 people to release their pay gap statistics. At this time it was revealed that some UK giants were paying women on average 18.4 per cent less than men.Easyjet reported a 51.7 per cent difference in gender pay and HSBC had a 59 per cent gap on average.
The trust say that young women in particular express little faith in their employers’ resolve to tackle the pay gap problem – more than half felt uncomfortable challenging their employers.
Young Women’s Trust chief executiveDr Carole Easton said: “Women face a gender pay gap from the moment they start work and it is not going away.
“We need urgent action to improve young women’s prospects and give them hope for the future. An easy start would be to include salary details in job adverts and ban the ‘current salary’ question in interviews, which only serves to perpetuate low pay rather than valuing women’s work for what it is.”