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niyad

(119,917 posts)
Wed Jan 3, 2018, 12:56 PM Jan 2018

Iceland Becomes First Country to Punish Companies for Paying Women Less Than Men

Iceland Becomes First Country to Punish Companies for Paying Women Less Than Men

"In Iceland, an example of what happens if you actually elect women."


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Katrin Jakobsdottir became Iceland's prime minister in November. The country's parliament is almost 50 percent female. (Photo: @jellsmoor/Twitter)

Iceland began the new year by becoming the first country in the world to mandate that all its companies must pay men and women equally. Following years of passing legislation promoting equal pay, employers that fail to ensure pay parity will now be subject to fines, thanks to a law passed last spring that went into effect Monday. "We have had legislation saying that pay should be equal for men and women for decades now but we still have a pay gap," Dagny Osk Aradottir Pind of the Icelandic Women's Rights Association told Al Jazeera. "We have managed to raise awareness, and we have managed to get to the point that people realize that the legislation we have had in place is not working, and we need to do something more." Under the new law, companies that employ more than 25 people will have to prove to the government that they're paying men and women equally. Officials hope the move will help Iceland to completely close its gender wage gap by 2020.

Iceland has long been admired by progressives as a model of gender equality, filling nearly 50 percent of its parliament seats with women. Supporters of the new law say it couldn't have been put into action without the strong presence of female lawmakers. For the past nine years, the small island country has been the world's highest-ranking nation in terms of gender equality according to the World Economic Forum's (WEF) Global Gender Gap Report. Iceland has managed to close its gender gap by about 10 percent since the report was first compiled in 2006, according to the WEF's markers which include political empowerment, economic opportunity, and education access as well as compensation.

As Iceland makes strides in its gender equality goals, the United States' gender wage gap has been narrowing slowly, with women earning 83 percent of men's salaries. The U.S. ranks at number 49 on the WEF's list; less than 20 percent of members of Congress are women. According to the American Association of University Women, at the wage gap's current rate of narrowing, American women would have to wait until 2119 to be paid equally to their male counterparts. The Trump administration has shown little interest in improving the gap, with the president suspending an Obama-era rule which required employers to provide the government with pay equity data.

. . . . .

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2018/01/02/iceland-becomes-first-country-punish-companies-paying-women-less-men

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Iceland Becomes First Country to Punish Companies for Paying Women Less Than Men (Original Post) niyad Jan 2018 OP
Yay shenmue Jan 2018 #1
The article isn't clear on how this law differs from that in the U.S. Jim Lane Jan 2018 #2
 

Jim Lane

(11,175 posts)
2. The article isn't clear on how this law differs from that in the U.S.
Wed Jan 3, 2018, 02:23 PM
Jan 2018

Sex discrimination in the terms or conditions of employment, including but not limited to pay, has been illegal in the U.S. for more than half a century. An employee or prospective employee who's discriminated against can recover a money judgment against the offending company.

From the cursory treatment in the linked article, I can see two possibilities. It states:

Under the new law, companies that employ more than 25 people will have to prove to the government that they're paying men and women equally.


That might mean a reversal of the burden of proof. In the U.S., the person claiming illegal discrimination has the initial burden of presenting evidence to make it more likely than not that there was discrimination. Only then is the employer required to refute that evidence and/or show that there was a valid non-discriminatory reason for the challenged decision(s). The practical problems of the burden of proof are eased in many cases because (1) the complainant begins the process by going to the EEOC, which can bring its resources to bear, and (2) often, multiple individuals join together to bring a class action.

The statement that, in Iceland, the company "will have to prove" nondiscrimination might mean that every company has to present a case whether or not it's sued. A reversal of the burden of proof would matter in some cases but it's not exactly revolutionary. Remember that "proof" doesn't mean it's definitive. In this context, it just means more likely than not.

The other possibility I see is that it means equal pay, period, as opposed to the "equal pay for equal work" standard that Bernie invokes in his quoted comment. Much of the pay gap in the U.S. arises because cultural factors push women into occupations that pay less. Sometimes they pay less because of discrimination but sometimes it's because of market forces. If a law firm's lawyers are mostly men (reflecting the percentage of male graduates of the law schools from which it recruits) and its secretaries are mostly women, would Iceland require that pay scales be adjusted to provide for equal pay regardless of job title? That seems unrealistic.

I've seen this headline elsewhere but I still don't understand the "first country" reference.
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