Pay Transparency Tools to Close the Gender Wage Gap
Women continue to earn less than men, in spite of major societal changes over decades and many labour market, educational and public policy initiatives that have targeted the gender wage gap. To address this persistent challenge, many governments are now mandating promising new pay transparency tools like employer pay gap reporting, equal pay audits, and gender-neutral job classification systems.
These policies hold considerable allure. Pay transparency offers a relatively simple and intuitive way to identify and address gender wage gaps when they occur in a workplace. These policies can function well in publicising wage gaps and incentivising employers to address the inequalities they find – but only with the right policy design and implementation. This report presents the first stocktaking of pay transparency tools across OECD countries and explores how such policies can help level the playing field for women and men at work.
OECD questionnaire on gender wage mapping and other pay reporting systems for equal pay
The following questionnaire was distributed in February-March 2021 to gender, labour, and/or social ministries in every OECD country in order to take stock of gender wage mapping and pay transparency measures explicitly aimed at promoting equal pay between women and men. The results of this questionnaire have been used to inform the present report on pay transparency tools. The information will later be used to fulfil the reporting requirements of the 2013 OECD Recommendation of the Council on Gender Equality in Education, Employment and Entrepreneurship and the 2015 OECD Recommendation of the Council on Gender Equality in Public Life.
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