New data has found women are earning on average just 78% of men’s full-time earnings
In Australia today, men still out earn women in every industry and across all occupations, said Workplace Gender Equality Agency (WGEA) Director Libby Lyons.
“This is not about women’s choices: whether you are a manager, a scientist, a butcher, a baker or even a TV presenter, there is a gender pay gap favouring men,” added Lyons.
“The sharp increases in employer action show that the momentum for improved gender equality is building.”
Indeed, more employers are taking action to address pay gaps and gender imbalances that persist across the economy, according to 2016-17 workplace data released by the WGEA.
The data records strong improvements in organisations conducting gender pay gap analyses, making managers accountable for gender equality outcomes, promoting women into manager roles and encouraging flexible work arrangements.
It also found women are earning on average just 78% of men’s full-time earnings and the average annual pay packet of full-time female employees is $26,527 less than men’s, rising to $89,216 at the top level of management.
Pay gaps favouring men were also identified in every occupational category, from 8.4% for Clerical and Administrative workers (worth $6,472) to 26.7% for Technicians and Trades workers (worth $28,042).
Management roles continue to be heavily dominated by men with women remaining under-represented in the upper leadership echelons, holding just 16.5% of CEO roles and 29.7% of key management personnel roles.
Lyons said the Agency’s world-leading dataset covering over four million employees and 11,000 employers shows strong improvement in employer awareness but the pace of change needs to increase.
“I am very encouraged that many more employers are now analysing their pay data for gender pay gaps and hopeful this will flow through to improved pay outcomes for women in the years ahead,” said Lyons.
“Other positive developments include an increase in managers having KPIs related to gender equality and more women are being appointed to manager roles.
“Unfortunately, the number of women on boards remains static and too few organisations are reporting their gender metrics up to the board. We need to see some real change. Boards must take more accountability for gender equality.”
Key findings include:
Related stories:
Australia Post is now paying men and women equally
Australia's gender equality efforts panned
Infrastructure giant funds women's scholarships
“This is not about women’s choices: whether you are a manager, a scientist, a butcher, a baker or even a TV presenter, there is a gender pay gap favouring men,” added Lyons.
“The sharp increases in employer action show that the momentum for improved gender equality is building.”
Indeed, more employers are taking action to address pay gaps and gender imbalances that persist across the economy, according to 2016-17 workplace data released by the WGEA.
The data records strong improvements in organisations conducting gender pay gap analyses, making managers accountable for gender equality outcomes, promoting women into manager roles and encouraging flexible work arrangements.
It also found women are earning on average just 78% of men’s full-time earnings and the average annual pay packet of full-time female employees is $26,527 less than men’s, rising to $89,216 at the top level of management.
Pay gaps favouring men were also identified in every occupational category, from 8.4% for Clerical and Administrative workers (worth $6,472) to 26.7% for Technicians and Trades workers (worth $28,042).
Management roles continue to be heavily dominated by men with women remaining under-represented in the upper leadership echelons, holding just 16.5% of CEO roles and 29.7% of key management personnel roles.
Lyons said the Agency’s world-leading dataset covering over four million employees and 11,000 employers shows strong improvement in employer awareness but the pace of change needs to increase.
“I am very encouraged that many more employers are now analysing their pay data for gender pay gaps and hopeful this will flow through to improved pay outcomes for women in the years ahead,” said Lyons.
“Other positive developments include an increase in managers having KPIs related to gender equality and more women are being appointed to manager roles.
“Unfortunately, the number of women on boards remains static and too few organisations are reporting their gender metrics up to the board. We need to see some real change. Boards must take more accountability for gender equality.”
Key findings include:
- Gender pay gap (full-time total remuneration): 22.4% (down 0.7 pp)
- Employers who have conducted a gender pay gap analysis: 37.7% (up 10.8pp)
- Employers with manager KPIs related to gender equality: 28.4% (up 5pp)
- Appointments of women to manager roles (including promotions): 43.4% (up 0.8pp)
- Employers with flexible work policies: 68.3% (up 5.3pp)
- Proportion of women directors on boards and governing bodies: 24.9% (up 0.2pp)
Related stories:
Australia Post is now paying men and women equally
Australia's gender equality efforts panned
Infrastructure giant funds women's scholarships