Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Women at all levels of UK companies are paid less than men

Women at all levels of UK companies are paid less than men |#shyamis

by Cassie Werber
It's old hat now that women are paid less than men, even if they’re at the very top of their industry. The latest confirmation comes from data in the UK showing that women in senior management or at director level in the country earn 11% less than their male counterparts, and are awarded with slightly more than half the average bonus given to men each year. The Chartered Management Institute, an industry group for managers, commissioned a survey of 72,000 UK managers in a broad set of public and private sector companies of various sizes, to compile the 2015 data.
The pay disparity between men and women is even bigger further down the corporate food chain. The average pay gap across all the survey respondents, which included positions ranging from junior executives to directors, was 22%, meaning women were paid an average of £8,524 ($13,374) less each per year.
“Having more women in senior executive roles will pave the way for others and ensure they’re paid the same as their male colleagues at every stage of their careers,” said Ann Francke, the CMI’s chief executive in a press release that accompanied the findings.
That will require more work. Women in the UK continue to outnumber men in junior management, the survey found, making up 67% of that cohort. But by the time they hit senior management their representation drops to 43%.
A UK government-backed report in March found that the number of women holding board positions in FTSE 100 companies was just shy of the country's 2015 target of 25%, a goal set in 2011 by the previous government when the proportion was closer to 12%. Of those companies' board seats, 23.5% are currently held by women.
So far, the UK hasn't instituted specific policies to promote its goal. For countries like Germany11 and Norway, imposing quotas on companies has helped boost the proportion of women on corporate boards.
Cassie Werber | August 26, 2015 at 1:00 am | Tags: careers, disparity, gender, management,pay, salary, women, women on boards, work | Categories: Uncategorized | URL:http://wp.me/p2G6tR-22Np

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