Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Valuing and counting women’s work Anna Ritchie Allan, Close the Gap.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Valuing and counting women’s work Anna Ritchie Allan, Close the Gap."— Presentation transcript:

1 Valuing and counting women’s work Anna Ritchie Allan, Close the Gap

2 Pay gap Occupational segregation Glass ceiling Men’s work / women’s work Women in the boardroom Inflexible working Childcare Discrimination Pay and reward Value

3 WOMEN’S EMPLOYMENT Women’s position in the labour market is more precarious: Need to work flexibly to accommodate caring responsibilities Concentrated in low pay sectors and occupations More likely to be in temporary or part-time work Have different experience of training and development More women than men are on zero hour contracts

4 UNDERVALUING Two aspects of undervaluing: women are paid less than men for doing the same job (individual); and women are employed in female-dominated occupations which are undervalued (labour market).

5 HOW UNDERVALUATION WORKS Human capital Concentration of women in low paid occupations (occupational segregation) UK penalty for the lowest paid Undervaluation within pay systems that allow for individualised pay

6 WHAT IS WORK? WorkLeisure Refuse collectionDoing the recycling Being a chefCooking a meal for your family Being a sewing machinist in a factorySewing clothes for your children and grandchildren Farming a cash cropSubsistence farming Writing a letter as a private sector board member Writing a letter as a third sector board member Caring for patients in a hospitalCaring for your own child, sick family member, or older family member

7 WOMEN’S UNPAID WORK Unpaid labour in the home and in the community GDP doesn’t count this work Informal childcare is worth £343bn to the economy – equivalent to 23% of GDP (ONS) One-third to a half of all valuable economic activity is not accounted for in traditional measures of economic performance i.e. GDP (OECD)

8 WHAT DOES DECENT WORK FOR WOMEN LOOK LIKE? Equal pay for equal work Free from sex discrimination; pregnancy and maternity discrimination; and sexual harassment. A workplace culture which promotes gender equality Flexible working, including part-time work, available at all levels Affordable, accessible, quality childcare

9 WHAT DOES DECENT WORK FOR WOMEN LOOK LIKE? ‘Women’s work’ is valued Women’s skills are visible, and used Reproductive labour is counted

10 Anna Ritchie Allan info@closethegap.org.uk 0141 337 8144 @closethepaygap


Download ppt "Valuing and counting women’s work Anna Ritchie Allan, Close the Gap."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google