Wednesday, 7 September 2011

The battle of the sexes still rages over pay


Female executives are currently being paid more at junior executive level than their male counterparts but achieving equal pay across all seniority levels will take another 98 years, research reveals.

UK female junior executives are earning an average salary of £21,969, some £602 more than male executives at the junior level, whose average salary is £21,367.  However, men continue to be paid more on average than women doing the same jobs, earning £42,441 compared with £31,895, and revealing a gender pay gap of £10,546, according to figures released by the Chartered Management Institute (CMI).
The 2011 National Management Salary Survey, which sampled 34,158 UK executives, shows that salaries for female executives increased 2.4 per cent in the 12 months from February 2010 to February 2011, a 0.3 per cent higher rate of increase than for male salaries. The CMI warns that if male and female wages continue to rise at current rates, it will be 2109, or another 98 years, before the average salary for female executives catches up with that of their male peers.
The survey also reveals that this year’s pay gap is slightly bigger than the £10,031 gap in the 2010 Salary Survey. Salary increases have also fallen since last year’s survey, when male salaries were rising at a rate of 2.3 per cent and women’s by 2.8 per cent.

Gareth Osborne of APA said: “I can see no evidence of Government addressing the disparity and suggest there is no impetus to see things change even by 2109. For this to be achieved we are going to have to see a radical change of strategic direction.”
APA

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