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Career developmentCoaching and mentoringEqual payFamily-friendly workingFlexible working

Four key actions to tackle a gender pay gap

by Gillian MacLellan 14 Feb 2017
by Gillian MacLellan 14 Feb 2017

New rules on gender pay gap reporting simply compel employers to publish details of their pay gap on an annual basis. Although ACAS guidance recommends employers devise an action plan, taking action is merely voluntary. Gillian MacLellan looks at how employers can tackle their pay gap.

Tackling the gender pay gap involves more than simply looking at pay. For those employers who are committed to substantively reducing their gap, be prepared for this to take time and resource. Although there may be some quick wins, in most cases this is a long-term process.

Gender pay gap resources

Gender pay gap reporting timeline: key dates for HR

Gender pay gap reporting: the draft legislation examined

How to get ready for gender pay gap reporting

Three key principles for gender pay transparency

How to measure and report a gender pay gap

In Scotland, larger public-sector organisations have been reporting their gender pay gap since 2013. Even the most dedicated have said that it is challenging to reduce it – this is a marathon, not a sprint.

The causes of a gender pay gap are a complex mix of work, society and the family, so employers will only be able to influence some factors.

How to tackle a gender pay gap

The information that will be obtained by following the statutory gender pay gap reporting process is limited. Employers must decide whether or not to go further and carry out more in-depth data analysis to gain a more detailed picture of pay, distribution and progression within their organisation.

A useful further step may involve carrying out a review of pay by grade; this will provide a far more illuminating “like for like” comparison. It can also help to present an employer’s position far more favourably. We have seen a gender pay gap figure calculated at company-wide level fall from 17% to 2% when viewed at grade level.

Once an employer has this increased visibility and greater understanding of why they have a gender pay gap, they are better placed to develop action plans. Although there are many ways to tackle this, there are four key areas for employers to focus on.

1. Pay

If an employer has concerns around pay – for example, they have a higher than sector average gender pay gap figure, or a grade level review indicates that men and women are paid different rates for the same work – it should review pay practices more generally, such as looking at pay levels for external recruits and the procedure for pay reviews.

It may also consider an equal pay audit. However, remember that the gender pay gap is not the same as unequal pay. If you have more men at the top of an organisation, you will have a gender pay gap, but it does not necessarily indicate that this is because of unlawful pay discrimination.

Even rectifying an element of pay discrimination identified will only form part of the solution. We are aware of employers who have taken positive steps to “equalise” pay disparities, but doing so has made only a marginal reduction in their gender pay gap.

Employers who decide to carry out an equal pay audit should take legal advice on the recommendations to try to ensure the findings are legally privileged.

2. Progression

The requirement under the gender pay gap Regulations to report on the distribution of men and women in each quartile of a workforce will help employers understand female distribution in their workforce.

If an employer has a low number of women at the top of the organisation then this is likely to merit further investigation. Steps can then be put in place to address this, such as “returnships” designed to increase the number of women coming back into roles after career breaks or maternity leave, or mentoring schemes to increase the numbers of women in senior roles.

3. Recruitment

In some sectors, a key issue is low levels of female participation. Employers in these areas should review their recruitment practices; for example, are roles targeted at male candidates? Is the literature equally attractive to male and female candidate?

Employers should also consider unconscious bias training for those involved in recruitment – the results can be surprising. Those with significant under-representation issues, may wish to make use of the positive action provisions within the Equality Act 2010. These are not single sex quotas that we hear mentioned in the media; they are more subtle and legal advice is advisable.

4. Flexibility

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As a first step, it is worth measuring how many men and women work flexibly at different levels of an organisation. It is often perceived that more senior roles are not suitable for working on some form of reduced hours or flexible basis; but employers must test this perception.

Increasing the availability of quality part-time or flexible arrangements at senior levels has been shown to help women progress to senior levels.  

Gillian MacLellan

Gillian MacLellan is an employment partner with law firm CMS.

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