Female bankers in favour of equal pay audits

-

Women working in financial sector are in favour of greater transparency on pay, according to preliminary findings of Financial News’ fourth annual Women in Finance survey.

Of the 900 respondents to the survey, 90% said governments should compel companies to conduct equal pay audits.

Discrepancies between men’s and women’s pay are widespread. Full-time female employees in the finance sector receive 55% less pay than men. This increases to a 79% pay gap when bonuses are taken into account.
But, according to data from the UK Equality and Human Rights Commission, companies with more transparent pay information have lower pay gaps.

The EHRC recommended that the UK government’s Equality Bill should include a clause on conducting annual equal pay audits and publishing the results when the bill was enacted last year, but the clause was neither repealed nor enacted.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

However, Elizabeth Corley, chief executive of Allianz Global Investors Europe, said reviewing distinctions on pay were part of routine good HR practice and not an issue for government intervention. She said: “If you regulate it, the risk is that it then becomes a matter of compliance rather than a matter of culture.”

Bronwyn Curtis, head of global research at HSBC, said that, while companies should be encouraged to be more transparent, she believes mandatory equal pay audits would create too much red tape for companies.

Collating gender pay gap data is far from straightforward.There are different ideas among employers about what the gender pay gap is, what measuring it involves and how to compare like for like.

These complexities leave the door open to deliberate obfuscation of the figures. Sandra Wallace, partner and head of equality and diversity for legal practice DLA Piper, said: “If employees feel they’re not being paid the same as a comparative then they can ask HR for an equal pay questionnaire.”

Latest news

Helen Wada: Why engagement initiatives fail without human-centric leadership

Workforce engagement has become a hot topic across the boardroom and beyond, particularly as hybrid working practices have become the norm.

Recruiters warned to move beyond ‘post and pray’ as passive talent overlooked

Employers risk missing most candidates by relying on job boards as hiring methods struggle to deliver quality applicants.

Employment tribunal roundup: Appeal fairness, dismissal reasoning, discrimination tests and religious belief clarified

Decisions examine appeal failures, dismissal reasoning, discrimination claims and religious belief, offering practical guidance on fairness, causation and proportionality.

Fears of AI cheating in hiring ‘overblown’ as employers urged to rethink assessments

Employers may be overstating concerns about AI misuse in recruitment as evidence of candidate manipulation remains limited.
- Advertisement -

More employees use workplace health benefits, but barriers still limit access

Many workers struggle to access employer healthcare support due to confusion, costs and unclear processes.

Gender pay gap in tech widens to nine-year high as AI roles drive salaries

Women in IT earn less as salaries rise faster in male-dominated AI and cybersecurity roles, widening pay differences.

Must read

Julia Meighan: Collaboration is key – How HR can work with Internal Communications teams

As the economy continues to improve, companies are now...

Is mediocrity all you can hope for in recruitment?

Can you really justify the cost of enhancing your selection process with personality, ability and situational judgment tests?
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you