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NEWS
European women earn 15% to 25% less than men, Irish Times, 19 July 2007
European gender pay gap shows no sign of closing
Jamie Smyth in Brussels
Woman earn on average 15 per cent less than men in
Europe despite being better educated than men. In the private sector,
women are paid 25 per cent less than men.
This "gender pay gap" is a result of several factors, including sex
discrimination, and has barely changed over the past decade, according
to the European Commission.
Unveiling a new action plan on equality yesterday Vladimír pidla,
commissioner for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities,
said the situation was "absurd".
"Girls outperform boys at school and more women enter the labour market
with a university degree than men, but a pay gap of 15 per cent
persists. This is an absurd situation and needs to change," said Mr
Spidla, who proposed changes to employment policies and better
application of existing law to tackle the problem of discrimination.
The situation in the Republic is better than in most EU countries, with
women facing a gender pay gap of 9 per cent, significantly down on the
1995 figure of 20 per cent. The Irish Congress of Trade Union (Ictu)
said the EU data clashed with the Government's National Women's Strategy
published in March, which recorded a 14 per cent gap. Ictu said the EC
data does not include people working fewer than 15 hours per week, with
the majority of such workers being women.
The Commission's strategy paper on tackling the pay
gap between men and women also found that 70 per cent of managers in the
Republic are male.
However, almost 90 per cent of Irish women complete upper secondary
education, compared to slightly more than 82 per cent of men. The
Commission's research highlighted several factors that contributed to
the gender pay gap. These include: sex discrimination, segregation into
less well-paid sectors of the labour market (40 per cent of women work
in health, education and public administration compared to 20 per cent
of men); the prevalence of part-time female workers (almost a third of
women compared to 8 per cent of men), a lack of high-quality and
affordable child care and other working commitments in the home.
Mr Spidla said men, regardless of whether they worked full- or
part-time, contributed seven hours a week of unpaid household work.
Women, on the other hand, contributed 35 hours a week if they also had a
part-time job, and 24 hours a week if employed full-time elsewhere. This
made it impossible for them to devote as much time as men to their
careers, he said.
The report also highlighted a "glass ceiling" that prevents women from
getting jobs even if they are qualified. As a result, there are fewer
females in the fields of technology, mathematics, engineering and
science.
To eliminate the gap, the commission will push for equal pay to be a
criterion for winning public contracts and ask EU states to set
objectives and deadlines for erasing the shortfall. © 2007 The Irish
Times
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