Mothers' pay lags far behind men

woman sitting next to manImage source, Thinkstock

Women in the UK returning to work after having a baby fall even further behind men in earning power, a report by the Institute for Fiscal Studies has said.

The gap between hourly earnings of the two sexes becomes steadily wider after women become mothers, the IFS says.

Over the subsequent 12 years, women's hourly pay rate falls 33% behind men's.

The IFS says this is partly because women who return to work often do so in a part-time capacity and miss out on opportunities for promotion.

Robert Joyce, one of the IFS report's authors, said women who chose to cut their hours on returning to work were not penalised with an immediate cut in their hourly wages.

However, he said: "Rather, women who work half-time lose out on subsequent wage progression, meaning that the hourly wages of men (and of women in full-time work) pull further and further ahead."

TUC general secretary Frances O'Grady said: "It is scandalous that millions of women still suffer a motherhood pay penalty.

"Many are forced to leave better-paid jobs due to the pressure of caring responsibilities and the lack of flexible working."

The Mum tax? Four women's experience

Image caption,
Alison (left) feels her degree was 'wasted', while Nerys considers herself one of the lucky ones
  • Alison Davies, 40, returned to work part-time to her job with the police after her having first child 11 years ago: "Due to the nature of my job I was demoted. I could not see the point of paying for a childminder and spending time away from my baby to open post and make tea for the people I used to manage so after six months I quit. I have started my own small business home boarding dogs but I feel my degree in biological science and post grad diploma have been wasted."
  • Nerys Dodds, who works in IT support at a college in Norfolk: "I must be one of the unmentioned luckier ones. Since returning to work three years ago from maternity leave I have been encouraged to progress to higher managerial roles and been allowed to change my working hours and contract a total of three times to allow a slow increase in hours as my children grow."
  • Agi, a project coordinator from London, returned to work just over a year ago to a "changed job" after her company was restructured. She said: "None of the changes include a pay review. I was told there were a lot of uncertainties and redundancies followed, which naturally made me worried I may lose my job if I object to taking on more."
  • Kate from Oxford said: "I decided to return to my job on an 80% contract, to manage childcare. Since my return, I've had almost all of my responsibilities and projects stripped from me and I've been left with the more basic, routine jobs. As my performance in the company's annual review and promotion system relies on me working on high profile projects I'm now set to perform badly in this year's review which will affect my bonus and pay rise next year."

Men are 40% more likely than women to be promoted into management roles, separate research by the Chartered Management Institute (CMI) and XpertHR found.

Mark Crail, content director at XpertHR, said: "The gender pay gap is not primarily about men and women being paid differently for doing the same job.

"It's much more about men being present in greater numbers than women the higher up the organisation you go. Our research shows that this gap begins to open up at relatively junior levels and widens - primarily because men are more likely to be promoted."

On average, women earn 18% less per hour than men, according to the IFS research.

However, this gap between men's and women's hourly pay rates has been closing in recent decades - it was 23% in 2003 and 28% in 1993.

But after women return to work following the birth of a first child, that wage difference per hour widens steadily.

"This apparent wage penalty for taking time out of paid work is greater for more highly educated women, at 4% for each year out of paid work," the IFS found.

"The lowest-educated women (who actually take more time out of paid work after childbirth) do not seem to pay this particular penalty, probably because they have less wage progression to miss out on."

Media caption,

Zoe, a nurse, explains how her career is on hold while she looks after her children.

The Fawcett Society, which campaigns for equality, said more quality part-time jobs were needed to address the pay gap.

Sam Smethers, Fawcett's chief executive, said: "Part-time workers can be the most productive, yet reduced hours working becomes a career cul-de-sac for women from which they can't recover."

The IFS found that in the 20 years following the arrival of a first child, the average woman had worked for four years fewer than men.

And men had spent nine years more than women working for 20 hours a week or more.

Image source, PA
Image caption,
The overall gender pay gap has been narrowing over the past two decades but still remains

Labour's shadow women and equalities minister Angela Rayner said: "There is little incentive for those young women who have just qualified with their A-levels and are considering university, to see that in the future they will still be paid less than the men they study alongside."

Earlier this year the government announced plans, to start in 2017, under which 8,000 employers with more than 250 staff will have to reveal the number of men and women in each pay range, and show where the pay gaps are at their widest.

A government spokeswoman said: "The gender pay gap is the lowest on record but we know we need to make more progress and faster."

In Scotland, the gender pay gap is the worst in the UK according to the CMI. Standing at 29.2%, the gap represents a £10,862 pay difference between genders.

In Northern Ireland, however, hourly earnings for women working full-time pulled slightly ahead of full-time male earnings for the first time in 2010. The trend has continued over the last five years, except in 2012 when average earnings were the same.

The Office for National Statistics has suggested this is in part to do with a higher proportion of public sector jobs in Northern Ireland compared with the rest of the UK.

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