working mums
Image credit: Pexels

The TUC has urged the UK Government to boost flexible working rights and give a cash injection for the childcare sector, after revealing that Women’s Equal Pay Day was 23 February in the UK; where working women effectively work for free for two months.

The gender pay gap for all employees in the UK currently stands at 14.9%. This pay gap means that working women must wait 54 days, nearly eight weeks, or two months – before they stop working for free on Women’s Pay Day. The average woman in paid employment effectively works for free for nearly two months of the year compared to the average man in paid employment, according to TUC’s latest analysis. In fact, in some parts of the country and in some industries where the gender pay gap is wider, women effectively work for free for even longer.

GENDER PAY GAP BY AGE

The TUC analysis found that the gender pay gap is widest for older women, so they have to wait longer for their Women’s Pay Day. Women aged between 50 and 59 have the highest pay gap (20.8%) and work the equivalent of 76 days for free, until Thursday 16 March 2023. Furthermore, women aged 60 and over have a gender pay gap of 18.4%. They work 67 days of the year for free before they stop working for free on Wednesday 8 March 2023. 

The gender pay gap widens once a woman becomes a mum. And older women take a financial hit for balancing work alongside caring for older relatives as well as children and grandchildren, says the TUC.  

better support needed for working women
Women aged 60+ have a gender pay gap of 18.4%, and work 67 days of the year for free before they stop working for free (on Wednesday 8 March 2023). Image credit: Pexels

REGIONAL GENDER PAY GAPS

The analysis also revealed that that in some parts of the country gender pay gaps are even bigger, so their Women’s Pay Day is later in the year. The gender pay gap is largest in the South East of England (17.9%). Women in this region work 65 days for free and they work for free until Monday 6 March 2023. 

Additionally, Women in the East of England (17.5% pay gap) and the East Midlands (16.6%) also work for free until next month (Saturday 4 March and Wednesday 1 March).  Regional variations in the gender pay gap are likely to be caused by differences in the types of jobs and industries that are most common in that part of the country, noted the TUC. 

INDUSTRIAL PAY GAPS

Despite the introduction of gender pay gap reporting back in 2017, the latest TUC analysis found that there are still big gender pay gaps in many industries. Shockingly, the gender pay gap persists even in jobs that tend to be dominated by female workers like education and healthcare. In these sectors women get paid much less per hour on average than men, both because they are more likely to be in part-time jobs or are in lower-paid roles.  

The gender pay gap in education is 22.2%, so the average woman effectively works for free for more than a fifth of the year (81 days) until Wednesday 22 March 2023. In health care and social work jobs, where the gender pay gap is 14%, the average woman works for free for 51 days until Monday 20 February 2023. 

The longest wait for Women’s Pay Day comes in finance and insurance. The gender pay gap (31.2%) is the equivalent of 114 days, meaning women work for free for nearly a third of the year until Sunday 23 April 2023. 

working mothers need better flexible working support and childcare support.
Women in finance and insurance work for free for nearly a third of the year until Sunday 23 April 2023. Image credit: Pexels

WOMEN DESERVE EQUAL PAY

“Working women deserve equal pay. But at current rates of progress, it will take more than 20 years to close the gender pay gap. That’s just not good enough. We can’t consign yet another generation of women to pay inequality,” stated TUC’s General Secretary Paul Nowak. “It’s clear that just publishing gender pay gaps isn’t working. Companies must be required to publish action plans to explain what steps they’ll take to close their pay gaps. And bosses who don’t comply with the law should be fined.” 

Flexible working is “key to keeping mums in jobs and is our best way of closing the gender pay gap”, added Nowak. “We should change the law so that all jobs are advertised with all the possible flexible options clearly stated. And all workers must have the legal right to work flexibly from their first day in a job.” 

It’s clear that the gender pay gap widens dramatically once women become mums. “We need ministers to fund childcare from the end of maternity leave to support working parents – along with better wages and recognition for childcare workers,” continued Nowak. “And both parents need to be able to share responsibility for caring for their kids. Dads and partners need better rights to well-paid leave that they can take in their own right. Otherwise, mums will continue to take on the bulk of caring responsibilities – and continue to take the financial hit.” 

RELATED ARTICLES

Many working mums still feel that they are forced to limit their careers as a result of their employer’s inflexible and outdated working policies and cultures, new research has revealed.

Just one-third of working women believe that their employer would tell them if their male colleagues earned more for the same work, if they asked. Click here to continue reading.

Latina Women’s Equal Pay Day How employers can help to close the gap.

US Equal Pay Day: Gender pay gap widens

Sign up for our newsletter