Introduction

This article reviews:

  • the current position on the gender pay gap (GPG) in Ireland;
  • what is happening with the proposed legislation to introduce mandatory reporting; and
  • what employers should be doing now.

Monday 9 November 2020 marked 2020's Equal Pay Day – the date from which women symbolically stop getting paid until the end of the year in comparison with their male colleagues because of the GPG.

The GPG is the percentage difference between the average hourly earnings of men and women. The relevant figures for Ireland are based on Eurostat statistics from 2017, which show a pay gap of 14.4% – slightly less than the 14.9% overall GPG in the European Union. The GPG should not be confused with the legal right to equal pay for equal work. Evidence of a specific employer having a GPG does not necessarily equate to discrimination on grounds of gender, although that might be a contributing factor.

Why is there a gender pay gap?

The reasons for the GPG are multiple and complex. Some of the issues at its root include the following:

  • There is a greater proportion of women taking on caring responsibilities.
  • There are more women in flexible working arrangements (almost 70% of part-time workers in Ireland are female).
  • Men tend to occupy higher-paid roles in many organisations.
  • Higher-paid sectors tend to be male dominated (eg, financial services), with lower-paid sectors such as childcare tending to be overwhelmingly female.

The #WorkEqual campaign centres on a month of activities and events in Ireland every November aiming to highlight the GPG. In 2020 it released a video featuring many prominent Irish political figures, including Senator Ivana Bacik and Lord Mayor of Dublin Hazel Chu, talking about how the GPG can be tackled. The video notes how gender stereotypes perpetuated in schools, the media, advertising, workplaces and the home can reinforce the gender gap, and so must be challenged wherever possible. Minister of State Peter Burke also highlighted the importance of securing greater recognition and improving working conditions for the care sector, which is heavily dominated by women.

Caring responsibilities and the gender pay gap

While the increase in remote working as a result of COVID-19 may be facilitating some women (and men) to improve their work-life balance, businesses have indicated that the burden of additional caring imposed by the pandemic seems to be falling disproportionately on women. The risk is that more women will take a step back from the workplace to manage childcare, which could trigger a "wider pay gap" in the future. According to the founder of the #WorkEqual campaign, Sonya Lennon:

[o]ur need for effective and affordable public childcare is highlighted starkly in the index findings, which show the gender gap is much wider between women and men in couples with children than in couples without children.

Iceland and Sweden are lauded as having the narrowest global gender gap score, according to the World Economic Forum. Interestingly, in 1974 Sweden was the first country in the world to replace maternity leave with parental leave for both partners. (This was seven years before Ireland introduced statutory maternity leave.) Initially, men had the option of transferring their days to their female partners, which most of them did. A 'daddy quota' was introduced to resolve this: three months' parental leave is now allocated to fathers on a use-it-or-lose-it basis, thereby incentivising Swedish fathers to take their full entitlement.

Similarly, in Iceland, President of the Icelandic Federation of State and Municipal Employees Sonya Yr Thrbergsdottir has said that the turning point came when the decision to split maternity leave between both parents was made, with fathers not permitted to transfer their three months' leave to the mother.

Mandatory reporting – what does the bill propose?

The proposed introduction of mandatory GPG reporting has been on the Irish political agenda for a while. In April 2019 the Gender Pay Gap Information Bill 2019 was published, with the general understanding being that it would come into force in 2020. The bill lapsed in January 2020 with the dissolution of the Dáil and the Seanad and, on account of COVID-19 and Brexit, there has been little discussion of it at the government level recently. Nonetheless, the programme for the new government commits to introducing legislation requiring large companies to publish their GPG, so the bill will most likely continue to progress in its current format (for further details please see "Impact of July Stimulus Plan and Programme for Government on employers").

Under the bill, employers in both the private and public sector will have to report on their GPG and publish information relating thereto. Initially, the bill will apply only to organisations with 250 employees or more, with the threshold eventually reducing to 50 employees or more over a three-year period. The bill will not apply to employers with fewer than 50 employees.

The GPG information proposed to be published under the bill includes:

  • the mean and median gap in hourly pay between men and women;
  • the mean and median gap in bonus pay between men and women;
  • the mean and median gap in hourly pay of part-time male and female employees;
  • the percentage of men and women who received bonus pay; and
  • the percentage of men and women who received benefits in kind.

Alongside the above information, the bill proposes obliging employers to publish a statement setting out the reasons for any pay gap reported and the measures, if any, that they are taking to eliminate or reduce the gap.

The minister for justice and equality will have power under the bill to make regulations prescribing the form, manner and frequency with which GPG information is to be reported and published, so it is accessible by both employees and the public. To ensure compliance with data protection legislation, the bill provides that the minister may prescribe measures that employers should take to ensure that personal data is pseudonymised before information is released.

Enforcement of reporting obligations

The bill also provides for the minister to appoint designated officers to investigate suspected breaches of GPG reporting obligations. Such officers will have power to peaceably enter the premises of any employer under investigation and obtain information which enables them to exercise their functions. The minister may also appoint designated officers to investigate and prepare a report for the purposes of ensuring that information published by employers on their GPG is accurate.

The bill will enable the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission (IHREC) to apply to the Circuit Court for an order requiring an employer to comply with its GPG reporting obligations, where the IHREC reasonably believes that it has failed to do so. The minister can also request the IHREC to carry out equality reviews and the drawing up of equality action plans. It is likely that where such applications are made, they will be public – or at least the IHREC will publish the names of employers for which they have had to make an application.

In addition, the bill enables employees to complain to the Workplace Relations Commission, seeking an order obliging their employer take a specified course of action to ensure compliance with its GPG reporting obligations. This is the only remedy available and there is no monetary compensation for pursuing such a complaint, so this course of action will most likely be pursued only by particular interested parties.

What should employers do now?

At present, there is no indicative timeframe for GPG reporting obligations to come into force for employers in Ireland. However, there are steps that employers can take now to prepare for their inevitable introduction – especially where they have already completed this exercise in order to comply with their GPG obligations in the United Kingdom or elsewhere. These steps include:

  • identifying key stakeholders;
  • ensuring that the necessary technology and resources are available to carry out the necessary reporting; and
  • collating the data early, in order to identify and address any potential pay gaps in advance of the legislation.

Lennon describes the GPG as "a symptom of deeper issues", and it is important to remember that mandatory reporting is not a magical cure. Moreover, employers understandably have many competing priorities in the current climate. It would nonetheless be advisable for them to take advantage of the current breathing space to reflect on their company values and test and challenge workplace policies and procedures in order to evaluate the root of any potential gender and other inequalities in their organisation.