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Home News

Gender pay gap persists in industry

Over half of financial services employees believe women in the industry earn unequal pay, a report by recruitment firm Hays has found.

by Taylee Lewis
March 12, 2015
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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In a report titled The Advancement of Women in the Workplace – which surveyed 6,000 people across 31 countries – Hays found that 52 per cent of the financial services industry believe men and women with comparable skills are not paid equally.

Financial services recorded the second lowest result of any industry, behind the construction, property and engineering sector, in response to whether “equally capable colleagues are paid/rewarded in an equal manner regardless of gender,” the report said.

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Moreover, only 36 per cent of financial services employees reported their company had implemented a gender diversity policy.

The report also noted that female representation in senior roles remains low across all industries.

An additional Hays report, Gender Diversity: why aren’t we getting it right?, found that “women hold only 18.2 per cent of board seats in ASX 200 companies and 41 boards in the ASX 200 still have no women.”

“There are just seven female CEOs in the ASX 200 and 12 in the ASX 500,” the report stated.

Hays suggested that greater female representation is an essential part of business growth and improved performance.

“Many of the companies we speak to are suffering from skill shortages and increasing the number of senior female professionals will help to address these skills gaps,” the Advancement of Women report said.

“By improving access to talent, organisations will be better able to drive their performance, grow their businesses and secure future success.”

It found the most effective ways for companies to promote gender diversity were adopting more flexible working practices and reviewing their workplace culture.

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Comments 1

  1. Susie Munro says:
    11 years ago

    Salary isn’t only about “comparable skills”. That’s like saying financial planning is only about “money”.

    Regardless of gender, it’s naive to think those who pay you are out there looking for a bunch of reasons to pay you more. That’s not because they want to pay you less (mostly), but because they need you to explicitly [b]demonstrate[/b] your value, not just [b]deliver[/b] it.

    Men are often better at that than women. Fee-only advisers are often better at that than commission-based advisers.

    Reply

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