The gender pay gap will take 30 years to close, report says |
| The Trades Union Congress (TUC) says efforts to close the gender pay gap will not be successful until 2056 if progress continues at the current rate. Currently, the gap stands at 12.8%, costing the average woman £2,548 annually. Women effectively work 47 days a year without pay compared to men. The TUC attributes the gap to part-time work due to caring responsibilities. Paul Nowak, TUC General Secretary, said: "Women have effectively been working for free for the first month and a half of the year compared to men." He added that the Employment Rights Act represents a crucial step towards achieving pay parity, as it will ban exploitative zero-hours contracts, which disproportionately affect women. The TUC has urged the government to enhance flexible working and childcare access to address this issue. Research released by the British Journal of Industrial Relations last year suggests that the gender pay gap may have been underestimated for more than 20 years: the Office for National Statistics had failed to properly account for the fact that it received more data from larger employers when it reported its annual survey of hours and earnings. |
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