The guide offers employers, senior managers, line managers, HR personnel and Payroll and Reward professionals an explanation of what the gender pay gap is, and how to report on it in compliance with legislation. It also offers insight into the business benefits of taking effective action to address the challenges identified by analysing and reporting your gap. Employees and employee/trade union representatives will also find the guide useful for a general understanding of this developing area of employment law. Throughout the guide, a legal requirement is indicated by the word ‘must’ - for example, an employer must base their pay reports on their pay situation in April each year. The word ‘should’ is used to indicate what Acas considers to be good employment practice.
Managing the Gender Pay Gap - December 2017
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Consultation published on enforcing the gender pay gap regulations 4 January 2018
The date is fast approaching when thousands of employers must have reported and published their Gender Pay Gap (GPG) figures and the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has published a consultation which details their planned approach to enforcing the gender pay gap regulations.
To date only 512 employers have published their data on the government’s GPG reporting service and the expectation is that around 9,000 employers are required to.
All private and voluntary sector employers with 250 or more employees in England, Wales and Scotland must publish information on their gender pay gap under the Equality Act 2010 (Gender Pay Gap Information) Regulations 2017.
All listed public sector employers with 250 or more employees in England must publish the same information under the Equality Act 2010 (Specific Duties and Public Authorities) Regulations 2017. ( Scottish and Welsh public authorities are already subject to regulations that include gender pay gap reporting). Private and voluntary sector employers must report the required pay gap information by 4 April 2018. Public sector employers in England must publish the required information by 30 March 2018. All employers covered by the GPG Regulations must then respectively report by 30 March and 4 April in following years. Consultation The EHRC has various enforcement powers under the Equality Act; however it is also consulting on its detailed planned approach to non-compliance for 2018-19.
On 17 December 2017 the EHRC published a consultation Closing the gap: enforcing the gender pay gap regulations .
The initial aim is to encourage compliance through a range of activities including: Promoting awareness Education Monitoring compliance
Publicising compliance rates Promotion of enforcement work
In the first instance, EHRC will aim to resolve non-compliance through informal resolution.
In 2018/19, the intention is to focus enforcement work on employers who do not publish the information required by the GPG Regulations. If the EHRC has the capacity to do so, it may also take action against employers for publication of inaccurate data. Where formal enforcement action is required, it will use the most appropriate action from its range of powers. The consultation details the indicative timescales within which the EHRC will aim to take certain actions once enforcement action has commenced.
EHRC has created an online survey for interested parties to provide feedback on this consultation .
The closing date for comments is 2 February 2018 .
The Chartered Institute of Payroll Professionals
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