VERA BAIRD: WOMEN NEED
BETTER PART-TIME WORK
9th February 2010
VERA BAIRD: WOMEN
NEED BETTER PART-TIME WORK
Women’s employment
strategy launched
More women than ever before are working
part-time (42 per cent of working women or 5.8 million women) but
too many have to downgrade when they leave full-time
employment. We need more highly skilled quality part-time jobs
for women, for men involved in caring and for businesses and the
economy to flourish, according to the new cross-government women’s
employment strategy launched today.
Vera Baird, Solicitor General and lead
Minister for the Equality Bill, called for flexible working to
become the norm, and an end to the outdated assumption that the
40/40/40 model - where we work forty plus hours per week, for forty
plus weeks, over forty plus years – is the top career choice.
Ms Baird said:
“This is important for women, who still
have the majority of caring responsibilities at home, but need and
want to work. It is also good for men, who share in caring, and for
businesses that will benefit more fully from a wider pool of
talent. By not opening up more senior roles to part-time work,
business is missing a trick. We can’t miss tricks when our economy
needs vigorously to re-grow after the recession.
“Today’s strategy contains a range of
non-statutory measures that will support more businesses in
offering flexible working. We need to break away from the
40/40/40 principle – where we work forty plus hours per week, for
forty plus weeks, over forty plus years.”
More than half of all women in part-time
employment are working below their potential, and a shortage of
suitable opportunities means that women are crowded into a narrow
range of lower paid part-time jobs. New research published
alongside the strategy found this was a major reason behind
differences in women’s and men’s pay.
The overall pay gap between men and women is
22 per cent. But the
gap is much wider for women working part-time – median hourly
earnings of part-time workers are 36.5 per cent less than full-time
workers – which has a negative impact on the household income for
many families.
Ms Baird said:
“It is time to move our labour market
assumptions on into the modern era. Working and caring are not
separate spheres now. We need a labour market framework which
encourages them to be flexibly mixed so that individuals have
maximum choice and businesses have satisfied employees.”
Angela Eagle, Work and Pensions Minister,
said:
"It is important for women to be able to balance work and
family life. We want them to be able to care for their children and
progress their careers, which is why we have established a Family
Friendly Working Hours Taskforce with employers, to look at how we
can encourage more organisations to create high quality, flexible
part-time jobs."
The Government today published Working
Towards Equality: a Framework for Action, which demonstrates
how it will work to tackle the gender pay gap, and ensure our
labour market is one:
- Where being a parent or carer is not a barrier to opportunity
or success;
- Where a person’s aspirations and opportunities are not
constrained by their gender; and
- That is transparent and free from gender discrimination.
The Government today also agreed to implement
the majority of the 43 recommendations made by the Women and Work
Commission in their report ‘Shaping a Fairer Future – a review
of the recommendations of the Women and Work Commission three years
on’.
Baroness Prosser, Chair of the Women
and Work Commission, said:
"I am pleased to see our suggestions of
new areas where action should be taken to narrow the gender pay gap
are being pursued.
"As the economic recovery gathers
strength, it is vital that the Government continues to work closely
with businesses to capitalise on the skills and experience of
women. The economic benefits of more women participating in the
labour market should not be overlooked at this crucial
time."
Some of the new commitments made in the
new strategy and action plan include:
- Challenging gender stereotyping in education;
- Investigating the barriers to sustainability in the
childcare sector; and
- Stimulating the supply of quality part-time work.
Last year Ms Baird joined ministers, unions,
businesswomen and others at a roundtable to identify what more
could be done to tackle the gender pay gap including widening
access to childcare and training, breaking down gender stereotyping
in the education system, promoting quality part-time work and
flexible working.
The new strategy and action plan complements
measures in the Equality Bill and will help deliver a labour market
which offers women genuine choices, equal opportunities and career structures which
enable them to progress and to fulfil their potential.
KEY FACTS
- In the three months to November 2009, 5.8m women were
working part-time
- 42 per cent of women work part-time compared with 12 per cent
of men
- Comparing part-time women with full-time men, the gender pay
gap is 39.4 per cent
- Part-time employment is expected to continue to increase in
prevalence for both men and women
- Women work part-time mainly because of caring
responsibilities
- A high proportion of those working part-time work below their
potential
- A shortage of "quality" part-time work across sectors &
occupations means many women crowded into narrow range of low paid
part time jobs.
MEDIA ENQUIRIES
Please contact the Government Equalities
Office press office on 0207 276 0988.
NOTES FOR EDITORS
- Working Towards Equality: A Framework for
Action is a joint publication from the Government Equalities
Office, the Department of Work and Pensions, the Department of
Children, Schools and Families, and the Department for Business.
The document, and related research, is available at http://www.equalities.gov.uk/
- The Women and Work Commission was reconvened
in October 2008 to assess how well its original
recommendations from 2006 had been adopted by the
Government. Its most recent report, and recommendations, were
published in July 2009 and can be found at http://www.equalities.gov.uk/.
- The Gender Pay Gap is a measure of the
difference between the hourly earnings of men and women. It is
determined by calculating women’s median gross hourly pay
(excluding overtime) as a percentage of men’s, and taking the
difference between this and 100 per cent. So, for example, the
gender pay gap is 15 per cent if women’s pay is 85 per cent of
men’s pay. The Office for National Statistics’ (ONS) principal
source for earnings statistics is the Annual Survey of Hours and
Earnings (ASHE). The ONS headline on a set of measures to look at
the differences in men’s and women’s pay:
- All female employees’ average pay compared
with all male employees’ average pay, i.e. the overall gender pay
gap, 22.0% as of April 2009
- Female full-time employees average pay
compared with male full-time employees’ average pay, i.e. the
full-time gender pay gap, 12.2% as of April 2009 and
- Female part-time employees’ average pay
compared with male part-time employees’ average pay, i.e. the
part-time gender pay gap, -2.0% as of April 2009.
- The Government Equalities
Office is responsible for the Government’s overall
strategy, legislation and priorities on equality issues. The Office
also has direct responsibility for policy on gender equality,
sexual orientation, and for integrating work on race. The Prime
Minister announced the establishment of the Government Equalities
Office (GEO) in July 2007 and it became a Department in its own
right in October 2007. It works to Ministers Harriet Harman,
Maria Eagle, Vera Baird and Michael Foster.