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Almost 80 per cent of UK firms pay men more than women

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LONDON: Almost eight out of 10 companies and public sector bodies operating in Britain pay men more than women overall, said data published on Thursday confirming long-standing gender inequality in the workplace.


Prime Minister Theresa May introduced laws last year to force all employers with more than 250 staff to submit their gender pay gap details to the Government Equalities Office, which has now published a slew of data.


Some 10,015 businesses complied with Wednesday’s midnight deadline for submissions, while those who failed to do so face the prospect of legal action.


Some 78 per cent of commercial businesses and public sector organisations pay male staff more than female colleagues, according to Thursday’s data cache.


However, 14 per cent of respondents revealed that they pay women more than men, while eight per cent had no gender pay gap.


The average gap — or percentage difference between the average male salary and the average female salary — across all companies that submitted details stood at 12 per cent.


May this week vowed to tackle the “burning injustice” of the gender pay gap — and has compared the battle with the women’s suffrage campaign a century ago.


Britain’s second only female prime minister after Margaret Thatcher wants to push toward pay equality, meaning the same money for a comparable job — from back-office staff to highly-paid board members.


Thursday’s data meanwhile revealed that local newspaper group North Wales News Media fared the worst, with 85.2 per cent of men paid more than women.


Millwall Holdings, the parent group of Millwall Football Club, reported an equivalent figure of 80 per cent.


Ireland’s Ryanair had one of the biggest gaps, with women paid 71.8 per cent less then men on average.


The airline claimed its data had been affected by the “relatively low numbers” of female pilots in the aviation industry. Ryanair has a total of 554 UK pilots, of which 546 are men and just eight are women.


“A hundred years ago, some women first won the right to vote,” May said earlier this week.


“But for all the welcome progress in the decades since, major injustices still hold too many women back.


“When I became prime minister, I committed myself to tackling the burning injustices which mar our society. One such is the gender pay gap.”


Britain’s beleaguered banks have already revealed that their female workers’ salaries lagged far behind those of their mostly male colleagues.


Men employed in London’s City financial district earn significantly more per hour than women excluding bonuses, and the difference is even wider among institutions that are more focused on investment banking.


— AFP


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