Earnings Gap: Women of Bangladeshi and Pakistani Heritage Earn Nearly One-Third Less Than White British Men

Earnings Gap: Women of Bangladeshi and Pakistani Heritage Earn Nearly One-Third Less Than White British Men

Women ⁢of Bangladeshi and Pakistani heritage‌ in the UK are earning on average almost a third⁢ less an hour than white British men, a pay gap campaigners say⁤ “should be causing ​national outrage”.

An analysis of ​pay data also ​reveals that mixed-race​ women and women of Black Caribbean heritage take home a⁤ quarter less money than their ⁤white ‍male counterparts.

The ⁢Fawcett Society publishes the⁢ figures on what has been⁤ designated ⁢Ethnicity Pay ⁤Gap Day 2024.

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Researchers have dug into statistics revealed in⁤ a big gender⁤ pay gap report published ⁣by the⁢ campaign group last November.‌ The figures⁣ show significant differences‍ between groups of women⁤ – and an even bigger disparity with men.

Alesha De-Freitas, the head of‍ policy‌ at Fawcett, ​said the ethnicity ‍pay gap was “creating​ double trouble for Black and​ minoritised‌ women” in the UK.

“The figures⁤ that we have here⁢ are ⁤so⁢ very ‌stark,” she ‌said.⁤ “The fact ⁢that women of Bangladeshi heritage are earning on‌ average almost a third less⁣ per hour than ⁤white British men should be causing national outrage.”

The analysis shows there ⁣is a 14.7% pay gap between women‌ of Bangladeshi ‍and‌ Pakistani​ heritage and white British⁢ women. Compared ​with white British men, the figure ⁢is 28.4%.

Between women of Black Caribbean heritage and⁣ white⁤ British men, the gap is 25%.

Dianne ‍Greyson is the founder of the campaign group that created the ⁣annual ​8 January Ethnicity Pay Gap Day. She called on the government to⁣ introduce mandatory ethnicity pay‌ gap reporting.

“Ultimately, unless‍ companies know ‌what their​ pay ⁣gap is and who ⁤it hits ​hardest, then how can ‍they begin to ⁢close it?

“We need more employers sharing knowledge ⁢and putting this issue at ⁤the ⁢top of their agenda, and I’m looking forward to discussing this further ‌at our ethnicity pay⁣ gap summit in February.”

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The Fawcett report identifies bias as a significant reason for the ethnicity and gender pay gap. It says 75% of women ‍of colour have experienced ‌racism at work while 42% report being passed over ⁣for promotion despite good feedback. The⁤ figure for white women is 27%.

De-Freitas said mandatory reporting worked. ‍“Mandatory gender pay gap reporting ⁤has effectively exposed and driven ⁢action to close the gender pay gap,” she said.

“We⁣ are urging government ⁣to ‍make ethnicity pay gap ‌reporting mandatory as well. But we must go further ​and ensure that ‌companies with persistent⁣ gaps are required to ‍publish action plans for closing and are held to account when they do not.”

It is⁣ the first data on⁣ the subject‍ since​ the pandemic.

2024-01-08‌ 01:00:43
Post from www.theguardian.com
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