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Gender pay gap, voluntary interventions and recession: The case of the British financial services sector

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Article

Healy, Geraldine ; Ahamed, M. Mostak

British Journal of Industrial Relations

2019

57

2

June

302-327

wage differential ; gender equality ; service sector ; financial sector ; economic recession

United Kingdom

Wages and wage payment systems

https://doi.org/10.1111/bjir.12448

English

Bibliogr.

" State institutions and trade unions put pressure on the British financial services sector to reform its gendered practices and reduce its gender pay gap following both the recession and the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) Inquiry (2009). This article considers the effect of these pressures by comparing the gender pay gap pre‐, during‐ and post‐recession periods. Using Labour Force Survey data, the article finds a marginal pay gap reduction in the post‐recession period, a reduction that was greater in financial services than in the rest of the economy. However, the financial services pay gap remained resilient and substantially higher at the top of the earnings distribution. Union membership and collective bargaining were shown to reduce the pay gap including for women members with children. In contrast, countervailing factors, including ethnicity and post‐recession longer working hours, contributed to the pay gap. The study reveals the limitations of voluntary interventions against a resilient gendered culture."

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