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Economic Development

'It feels like we've gone backwards' - gender equality hit by cost crisis says Wales TUC's general secretary

Shavanah Taj said women still have a "long way to go" before achieving equity in pay and terms and conditions of employment

Shavanah Taj (Image: WalesOnline/Rob Browne)

The cost of living crisis has stalled efforts to achieve gender equality in the workplace, says general secretary of trade union umbrella body Wales TUC. Shavanah Taj, who joined Wales TUC in February 2019 from the Public and Commercial Services Union, believes women still have a “long way to go” before achieving equity in pay and in terms and conditions of employment.

“There is a lot of talk about ethics, improvements and standard setting but now with a cost of living crisis, it feels like we have gone backwards. The attitude has become whatever you can get, you can get,” she said. And on International Women’s Day, women still aren’t getting a fair deal in the workplace.

Last month, the TUC published data which revealed that the gender pay gap now stood at 15%, meaning that women work 54 days a year - nearly two months - for free. In Wales, it is around 45 days.

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Even in sectors that are dominated by a female workforce, such as education, health and social care, women get paid much less per hour on average than men, both because they are more likely to be in part-time jobs or less senior roles.

The gender pay gap persists despite the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government requiring all companies that employ 250 people or more to publish their pay gap statistics since 2017.

“We need to see what companies are doing to close that gap,” said the general secretary. “There needs to be monitoring, evaluation and a level of enforcement by organisations like the Equality and Human Rights Commission. We need clearer targets and there needs to be fines put in place for those who don’t comply.”

The gender pay disparity widens for older women and women who become mothers, as they take a financial hit for balancing work alongside caring for children, grandchildren and older relatives. Many blame the lack of affordable childcare in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, which is among the most expensive in the world, for forcing mothers to leave employment which in turn exacerbates the labour shortage in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.