HRreview 20 Years
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Subscribe for weekday HR news, opinion and advice.
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

Calls for whistleblower protection as UK prepares DEI pay gap legislation

-

The call comes days after the announcement that NDA agreements will be made void in case of workplace harassment and discrimination, and follows the government’s announcement of the forthcoming Equality (Race and Disability) Bill.

The bill, which the equalities minister Seema Malhotra has described as part of the government’s “absolute” commitment to DEI, aims to increase transparency and accountability around pay equity and is expected to be published later this year. It would require employers with more than 250 staff to publish ethnicity and disability pay gap data, similar to existing gender pay gap reporting obligations. A new regulatory and enforcement body would also be created to address pay discrimination.

Concerns about transparency and enforcement

In its submission to the consultation on the proposed legislation, which closed in June, the Black Equity Organisation (BEO) argued that whistleblower protections must be built into the framework to ensure workers can safely raise concerns.

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

 

“Support for whistleblowers is also essential,” the BEO said, calling for “a confidential channel for employees who report concerns to ensure they are not penalised”.

The BEO added that employers who fail to meet their obligations under the new regime should be named in public notices. The organisation also urged the government to require more detailed breakdowns in published data to reflect different experiences among minority ethnic groups. It further called for mandatory pay gap reporting to apply to companies with more than 50 staff, a position also supported by the Trades Union Congress.

The bill is also expected to introduce requirements for employers to publish action plans detailing how they intend to address disparities in pay between white and non-disabled employees and their Black, minority ethnic and disabled colleagues.

The case for extending transparency to ethnicity and disability

Nick Henderson-Mayo, Head of Compliance at eLearning and DEI solution provider VinciWorks, told HR review, “Large UK organisations have been reporting the gender pay gap for years. It’s helped to highlight inequalities and bring more money into women’s pockets – people who have been systematically underpaid for generations.

“Extending pay gap reporting to ethnicity and disability could bring the same clarity and more money into people’s pay packets,” Henderson-Mayo added. “Pay gap reporting uncovers inequalities that are often unconscious, but no less damaging, across large workforces.”

He added, “Why does the average disabled person take home less? Why might someone from one ethnicity be paid more than one from another? The causes aren’t always malicious, but they’re real, and reporting forces organisations to explain them.”

Henderson-Mayo drew a comparison between the UK and the US, noting that in the United States, pay transparency has benefited from civil rights laws, union protections, class action mechanisms and stronger litigation rights. In contrast, the UK lacks equivalent routes for redress, making regulatory reform critical for workers experiencing discrimination.

Legislation seen as a turning point for DEI credibility

With employer DEI initiatives under increasing scrutiny, the proposed legislation may also help focus corporate efforts on measurable outcomes. “At a time when ‘DEI’ units in companies are under pressure to prove their value and purpose, focusing on pay gap transparency could be a very effective vehicle,” Henderson-Mayo said.

“One of the reasons ‘DEI’ as a concept has received so much criticism on both sides of the Atlantic is that, for many, their focus is on the wrong thing. ‘DEI’ has been criticised for focusing on microaggressions instead of money and pronouns instead of promotions. Crucially, ‘DEI’ comes from the board down, not the worker up. And workers – at the end of the day – want and deserve better pay.

“Pay gaps, whether based on ethnicity, sex or disability, take money out of workers’ pockets for illegal reasons. Workers need tools to challenge this kind of discrimination. The UK’s consultation on pay gap legislation should be a watershed moment. This can put power back in the hands of workers to challenge unlawful discrimination with evidence, not just anecdotes.”

The government has yet to confirm a timetable for publication of the full bill or how it plans to respond to the consultation submissions.

Alessandra Pacelli is a journalist and author contributing to HRreview, an HR news and opinion publication, where she covers topics including labour market trends, employment costs, and workplace issues. She is a journalism graduate and self-described lifelong dog lover who has also written for Dogs Today magazine since 2014.

Latest news

Felicia Williams: Why ‘shadow work’ is quietly breaking your people strategy

Employees are losing seven hours a week to tasks that fall outside their core job description. For HR leaders, that’s the kind of stat that keeps you up at night.

Redundancies rise as 327,000 job losses forecast for 2026

UK job losses are set to rise again as redundancy warnings hit post-pandemic highs, with employers cutting roles amid rising costs and economic pressure.

Rise of ‘sickfluencers’ and AI advice sparks concern over attitudes to work

Online influencers and AI tools are shaping how people approach illness and employment, heaping pressure on employers.

‘Silent killer’ dust linked to 500 construction deaths a year as 600,000 workers face exposure

Hundreds of UK construction workers die each year from silica dust exposure as a new campaign calls for stronger workplace protections.
- Advertisement -

Leaders ‘overestimate’ how much workers use AI

Firms may be misreading workforce readiness for artificial intelligence, as frontline staff report far lower day-to-day adoption than executives expect.

Cost-of-living pressures ‘keep unhappy workers in their jobs’

Many say economic pressures are forcing them to remain in jobs they would otherwise leave, as pay and financial stability dominate career decisions.

Must read

Iffi Wahla: Harnessing global talent: remote work’s role in dissolving borders

Iffi Wahla explores the transformational impact of remote work on global employment opportunities.

Deborah Lewis: Nature’s guide to business improvements

My friend and mentor Dean Van Leuuwen of consultancy...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you