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Summer 2024 employment trends series: pay transparency and equity

By Anna Chabrelie, Amy Gordon, Claire Maclean, and Emily Russell
August 14, 2024
  • Disability pay gap reporting
  • Discrimination
  • Diversity and inclusion
  • Ethnic pay gap reporting
  • Gender pay gap reporting
  • Legislative Changes
  • Pay transparency
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As part of our summer 2024 employment trends series, we look at recent developments in pay transparency and equity.

EU Pay Transparency Directive

As part of our summer 2024 employment trends series, we look at recent developments in pay transparency and equity.

The EU is poised to enhance pay transparency through the EU Pay Transparency Directive, which member states must implement into their own law by June 2026. The Directive aims to address gender pay disparities and promote a more equitable workplace by introducing several key measures:

  • Right to request pay information: employees will have the right to request information on pay levels, broken down by gender, for categories of workers doing the same work or work of equal value.
  • Prohibition on salary history inquiries: employers will be prohibited from inquiring about prospective employees’ salary history during the recruitment process, a move designed to prevent the perpetuation of historical pay inequalities.
  • Enhanced pay gap reporting: there will be an obligation for employers to provide more detailed reports on potential pay gaps within their organisation. This includes the requirement for a joint pay assessment, conducted by the employer in cooperation with workers’ representatives. The employer must accompany the assessment with appropriate action where a gender pay gap of at least 5% is identified and cannot be justified by objective gender-neutral factors.

UK pilot scheme for pay transparency

The UK government initiated a pilot scheme in 2022 where participating employers were encouraged to include salary details in job adverts and refrain from asking about salary history. This pilot was designed to test the waters for potential legislative changes. In May 2024, the UK government announced it was “pausing” the pilot to learn from the experiences of other countries that have taken similar measures.

Ethnicity/disability pay gap reporting

While the previous UK government acknowledged the value of ethnicity pay gap reporting in the past, it stopped short of making it mandatory, as detailed in the “Inclusive Britain” report from March 2022. However, the Labour Party’s pre-election Plan to Make Work Pay included a commitment to introduce mandatory ethnicity and disability pay gap reporting and the King’s Speech promised an Equality (Race and Disability) Bill. As well as making ethnicity and disability pay gap reporting mandatory for employers with 250 or more employees, this Bill will also create a “full right” to equal pay for ethnic minorities and disabled people. The government plans to publish the Bill in draft form for consultation.

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Disability pay gap reporting, Discrimination, ethnic pay gap reporting, gender pay gap reporting, legislative changes, Pay transparency
Anna Chabrelie

About Anna Chabrelie

Anna is an associate in the People, Reward and Mobility practice in Dentons' London office, with a focus on employment law. Anna advises on both contentious and non-contentious areas of employment law.

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Amy Gordon

About Amy Gordon

Amy is an associate in Dentons' Glasgow office. She is a member of the People, Reward and Mobility (PRM) practice group.

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Claire Maclean

About Claire Maclean

Claire is experienced in advising employer clients in the public and private sectors on a wide range of contentious and non-contentious matters. Her expertise ranges from providing practical and commercial advice on all day-to-day HR queries to providing strategic advice on complex business reorganizations, redundancies and TUPE transfers. Claire has considerable experience in advising clients on all aspects of TUPE transfers, whether business transfers or changes in service provider.

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Emily Russell

About Emily Russell

Emily is an associate in Dentons' People Reward and Mobility team in London, specialising in UK employment law. Emily supports businesses on a broad range of contentious and non-contentious employment related matters.

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