Women working full-time in Scotland earn less on average than men. Scotland’s gender pay gap at 6.2% in 2016 is smaller than the UK average and is generally declining. However, key sectors and occupations continue to post substantial pay gaps. Occupational segregation, across sectors, is a major factor in explaining Scotland’s gender pay gap, but the underlying causes are the career disruptions of female workers plus some combination of other harder to measure factors such as discrimination and gender bias. The potential economic benefits from closing Scotland’s gender pay gap are substantial; a more engaged, inclusive and productive workforce, an increase in consumer spending and an easing of skills shortages
This paper investigates gender differences between the log wage distributions of full-time British e...
Since April 2017 UK employers with over 250 employees have been required to publicly report their ge...
Equal pay legislation has been in existence for over 40 years in the UK and the legal rules dealing ...
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The gender pay gap can be measured in various ways. Comparing median gross weekl...
Northern Ireland forms an important outlier to the established international pattern of a pronounced...
This study reports novel facts about the UK gender pay gap. We use a representative, longitudinal an...
In this paper I study a policy in which employers are required to publicly report gender pay gap sta...
This is a report on research undertaken by Professor Wendy Olsen, Dr Vanessa Gash, Sook Kim, and Dr ...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
State institutions and trade unions put pressure on the British financial services sector to reform ...
This study reports novel facts about the UK gender pay gap. We use a large, longitudinal, representa...
Purpose-Using survey datasets, this work explores the impact of economic freedom on the gender pay g...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
This paper uses British and Canadian linked employer-employee data to investigate the importance of ...
Gender wage differentials and discrimination are issues of primary significance both in terms of equ...
This paper investigates gender differences between the log wage distributions of full-time British e...
Since April 2017 UK employers with over 250 employees have been required to publicly report their ge...
Equal pay legislation has been in existence for over 40 years in the UK and the legal rules dealing ...
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The gender pay gap can be measured in various ways. Comparing median gross weekl...
Northern Ireland forms an important outlier to the established international pattern of a pronounced...
This study reports novel facts about the UK gender pay gap. We use a representative, longitudinal an...
In this paper I study a policy in which employers are required to publicly report gender pay gap sta...
This is a report on research undertaken by Professor Wendy Olsen, Dr Vanessa Gash, Sook Kim, and Dr ...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
State institutions and trade unions put pressure on the British financial services sector to reform ...
This study reports novel facts about the UK gender pay gap. We use a large, longitudinal, representa...
Purpose-Using survey datasets, this work explores the impact of economic freedom on the gender pay g...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
This paper uses British and Canadian linked employer-employee data to investigate the importance of ...
Gender wage differentials and discrimination are issues of primary significance both in terms of equ...
This paper investigates gender differences between the log wage distributions of full-time British e...
Since April 2017 UK employers with over 250 employees have been required to publicly report their ge...
Equal pay legislation has been in existence for over 40 years in the UK and the legal rules dealing ...