Pay discrimination in the UK between male and female employees may be set to be a problem of the past, with the news that salary gaps between the genders are closing. According to the Office for National Statistics, the gender pay gap, as measured by the median hourly pay excluding overtime, narrowed between 2008 and 2009. The pay gap now stands at 12.2 per cent for full-time employees – which is a decline from the 12.6 per cent recorded in 2008 – while for part-time workers the gap stands at -0.2 per cent. For all UK employees, the divide has grown closer, from 22.5 per cent to 22 per cent over the same period, with 2009 hourly rates recorded as an average of £12.97 for men and £11.39 for women working full time. Commenting on the news, Harriet Harman, minister for women and equality, said: “Today’s figures are a small step in the right direction and the Equality Bill will help women make even further progress by shining a spotlight on gender pay discrimination, workplace by workplace, so problems can be identified and action taken.” She added that employers will no longer be able to rely on keeping their pay structure “secret”.
Workers in four English regions will be directed towards personalised health and employment support as ministers test alternatives to GP-issued fit notes.
Climate advisers have urged ministers to introduce maximum workplace temperature protections as heatwaves increasingly threaten productivity and staff wellbeing.
"There are ways to bridge the growing skills gap, plan for roles you don’t even know about yet and start solving this problem now before it’s too late."
The buzz around gender pay gap reports has resulted in calls for pay transparency to be increased to other areas, with ethnicity pay gap reporting top of the list.