Gender pay gap in New Zealand

The gender pay gap in New Zealand is the difference in the average hourly wages of men and women in New Zealand. It is calculated using the median hourly wage paid to full-time male and female workers. An economic indicator of gender inequality, a gender pay gap suggests a failure to ensure the principles of pay equality and equal pay for equal work.

Legislation

Equal Pay Act 1972

Until 1960, separate pay rates for men and women doing the same work were legal in both the public and private sectors.[1] This changed with the introduction of the Government Service Equal Pay Act 1960, which abolished gender-based pay scales in the public service.[2] In 1972, the Equal Pay Act (EPA) extended the principle of pay equity to the private sector. Under the EPA, if work, or a class of work, requires the same, or substantially similar, degrees of skill, effort and responsibility of its male and female employees, yet pays them different rates, that difference in pay is deemed to be gender-based, and illegal.[3] If a class of work is exclusively or predominantly performed by females, gender-based pay inequality is deemed to exist if a different rate would be paid to male employees with the same, or similar, skills performing the work under substantially similar conditions and with substantially similar degrees of effort.[4]

Human Rights Act 1993

The Human Rights Act 1993 (HRA) expressly prohibits discrimination on thirteen grounds, including sex.[5] The HRA applies to all aspects of employment, including remuneration. If an employee feels that they have been unlawfully discriminated against in the course of their employment they can make a complaint to the Human Rights Review Tribunal.[6] As defined by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE), sex-based employment discrimination exists when an employer refuses, or fails to offer an employee the same terms, conditions, benefits or opportunities as other employees with the same or similar qualifications, experience or skills working in the same or similar circumstances, but of the opposite gender.[7]

Other legislation

International obligations

In addition to its domestic legal framework, New Zealand has ratified several international instruments concerned with pay equality.

International Labour Organisation Conventions

New Zealand is a party to the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Convention concerning Equal Remuneration for Men and Women Workers of Equal Value (ILO 100). Art 2(1) provides:[11]

Each member shall… ensure the application to all workers of the principle of equal remuneration for men and women workers for work of equal value.

New Zealand has also ratified the ILO Convention concerning Discrimination in Respect of Employment and Occupation (ILO 111), which provides:[12]

Each Member… undertakes to declare and pursue a national policy designed to promote… equality of opportunity and treatment in respect of employment and occupation, with a view to eliminating any discrimination in respect thereof.

Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women

New Zealand ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) in 1985. Article 11 provides that states must take appropriate measures to eliminate employment discrimination, including ensuring the right to equal remuneration, and equal treatment for work of equal value.[13]

Other international obligations

Gender pay gap

Although the EPA made different pay rates illegal, New Zealand has a persistent pay gap. In 2011 the New Zealand Human Rights Commission (HRC) described it as "a systemic and enduring inequality for women."[16] From 2000-2008 the gender pay gap consistently sat between 12 and 14%.[17] Since 2009 it has reduced steadily, and in 2014 stood at 9.9%.[18] Internationally, New Zealand is moderately placed on global pay equality indexes. In 2014, it was 33rd of 142 countries in the World Economic Forum Global Gender Gap Report rankings of wage equality for similar work.[19]

In New Zealand, the gender pay gap is significantly influenced by ethnicity. In 2011, the HRC found that while the difference between the median hourly wage of a European male and European female was 12.4%, between a European male and a Pacific woman it was 24.4%.[20]

Several sources of New Zealand’s gender pay gap have been suggested:

Occupational segregation

47% of female workers are in occupations where 80% or more of the employees are women.[21] MBIE notes that:[22]

Women are often clustered in a narrow range of occupations… The skills and knowledge that women bring to the work in female-dominated occupations may not be recognised and therefore not valued appropriately in comparison to other jobs.

A 2011 report by Goldman Sachs noted that female-dominated areas tend to be social services oriented, meaning that employee outputs are more difficult to measure.[23] This creates a risk of systemic undervaluation. The risk of undervaluation posed by occupational segregation was recognised by the UN Human Rights Council Working Group in the 2009 and 2014 Universal Periodic Review of New Zealand. The 2014 Review included recommendations that New Zealand review its equal pay legislation, with a focus on addressing the issue of systemic undervaluation of women’s work, and minimizing the link between the pay gap and ethnicity.[24]

Cases concerning occupational segregation

i. Clerical Administrative v Farmers Trading[25]

In 1986, the New Zealand Clerical Workers Union brought a case under the EPA arguing that the wages being paid to clerical workers were lower than those being paid for work of equal value, such as that of builders, and that this difference existed because over 90% of clerks were female, whereas the majority of builders were male.[26] The application was rejected on the basis that the EPA was limited to ensuring equal pay between male and female employees within the same sector.[27] Comparison across sectors for the purpose of identifying systemic undervaluation was deemed to fall outside the scope of the EPA.

In response to the case, the Department of Labour commissioned a study on wage equality. It concluded that there was still a substantial gender pay gap in New Zealand, and that occupational segregation was one of its main sources.[28] The report led to the enactment of the Employment Equity Act 1990 (EEA), which contained provisions on both pay equity and equal opportunity. However, after a change in government from the Labour Party to the National Party in the 1990 New Zealand election, the EEA was repealed.

The ILO Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations has criticised Farmers Trading, saying that its interpretation of the EPA failed to give legislative effect to the principle of equal remuneration.[29]

ii. Terranova v Bartlett[30]

Ms Bartlett was a caregiver at a rest home, an occupation in which 92% of workers are female. She claimed that even though she was paid the same wage as her male colleagues, both her and their pay rate was artificially low because of the predominance of female workers in the caregiving sector.[31] Reversing the decision in Farmers Trading, the Court of Appeal of New Zealand held that wage comparisons between female and male-dominated sectors can be made under the EPA in order to determine whether systematic undervaluation is occurring in female-dominated occupations.[32] The Court stated:[33]

A rate of pay that is depressed because of sex-based undervaluation of the work is not a rate in which there is no element of sex-based differentiation.

The case has been received as a positive development in human rights and employment law. Employment lawyer John Goddard states that the EPA was widely considered to be inadequate for ensuring true pay equality, but that in light of Terranova this must now be reconsidered.[34] Lorraine Skiffington said the case is “the first significant step towards realizing the social justice that was envisaged by the architects of the [Equal Pay] Act… It decisively deals with the narrow ‘self-defeating’ comparisons that have perpetuated pay and employment inequalities in the past.”[35]

Equal opportunities for women

The under-representation of women in higher-level and managerial positions is also given as a reason for the gender pay gap. In the public sector, women make up 59% of the workforce but only 24% of the chief executives.[36] In the private sector, the HRC has found that, among the top 100 companies listed on the New Zealand Stock Exchange, three have female chief executives.[37] The New Zealand Law Society states that while 46.3% of practicing certificates held by lawyers in law firms in 2013 were held by women, only 19.8% of partners or directors in those firms were women.[38]

Possible reform

In 2011, the HRC issued its report Tracking Equality at Work, containing a draft replacement of the EPA called the Pay Equality Bill.[39] Unlike the EPA, the Pay Equality Bill shifts the onus of proving pay equality from the employee to employer. Instead of requiring a finding of pay discrimination, the Pay Equality Bill establishes a positive right to pay equality which must be satisfied by employers. As at April 2015, the Pay Equality Bill had not yet been considered for enactment.

See also

References

  1. Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment [MBIE] "History of Pay and Employment Equity in New Zealand" Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment: Labour Information.
  2. Government Service Equal Pay Act 1960, s 3(1)(a).
  3. Equal Pay Act 1972, s 3(1)(a)(i).
  4. Equal Pay Act 1972, s 3(1)(b).
  5. Human Rights Act 1993, s 21(1)(a).
  6. Human Rights Act 1993, s 94.
  7. Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment Minimum Employment Rights and Obligations (2013) at 8.
  8. Employment Relations Act 2000, s 105.
  9. State Sector Act 1988, s58(3).
  10. Crown Entities Act 2004, s 118(2)(b).
  11. Convention concerning Equal Remuneration for Men and Women Workers of Equal Value (adopted 29 June 1951, entered into force on 23 May 1953), art 2(1).
  12. Convention concerning Discrimination in respect of Employment and Occupation (adopted 25 June 1958, entered into force 15 June 1960), art 2.
  13. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on April 1, 2011. Retrieved April 1, 2011. Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women 1249 UNTS 13 (opened for signature 18 December 1979, entered into force 3 September 1981), art 11.
  14. Universal Declaration of Human Rights GA Res 217A, III A/810 (1948), art 23(2).
  15. International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights 993 UNTS 3 (opened for signature 16 December 1966, entry into force 3 January 1976), art 7.
  16. Human Rights Commission Tracking Equality at Work (June 2011) at 28.
  17. Ministry for Women "Gender pay gap".
  18. Ministry for Women "Gender pay gap".
  19. World Economic Forum Global Gender Gap Report 2014 (2013) at 284.
  20. Human Rights Commission Tracking Equality at Work (June 2011) at 12.
  21. Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment [MBIE] “What is Pay and Employment Equity” MBIE Labour Information.
  22. MBIE “What is Pay and Employment Equity” MBIE Labour Information.
  23. Philip Borkin Closing the Gender Gap: Plenty of Potential Economic Upside (Goldman Sachs, 9 August 2011) at 1.
  24. United Nations Human Rights Council Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review Draft report of the Working Group on the Periodic Review: New Zealand XVIII A/HRC/WG.6/18/L.1 at 128.39, 128.99.
  25. New Zealand Clerical Administrative etc IAOW v Farmers Trading Co Ltd [Farmers Trading] [1986] ACJ 203.
  26. Farmers Trading [1986] ACJ 203 at 6.
  27. Farmers Trading [1986] ACJ 203 at 207.
  28. PJ Hyman and A Clark Equal Pay Stud Phase One Report (Department of Labour, 1987).
  29. International Labour Organisation Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations Observation: Equal Remuneration Convention, 1951 (No 100) – New Zealand (2012).
  30. Terranova Homes & Care Limited v Service and Food Workers Union Nga Ringa Tota Incorporated [Terranova] [2014] NZCA 516.
  31. Terranova [2014] NZCA 516 at [6].
  32. Terranova [2014] NZCA 516 at [147].
  33. Terranova Homes [2014] NZCA 516 at [108].
  34. John Goddard “Equal Pay Act Claims: A New Conversation” (2013) ELB 111 at 113.
  35. Lorraine Skiffington “Heralding a New Era of Pay Equity” (2013) ELB 123 at 125.
  36. Human Rights Commission New Zealand Census of Women’s Participation (2012) at 4.
  37. Human Rights Commission New Zealand Census of Women’s Participation (2012) at 2.
  38. New Zealand Law Society “Women in the Legal Profession: By the numbers”.
  39. Human Rights Commission Tracking Equality at Work (June 2011) at 36.

External links

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