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After Iceland and Germany, Now France Declares War on the Gender Wage Gap (fastcompany.com)

France says it wants to make good on at least one-third of its motto of "liberte, egalite, and fraternite," by ensuring pay equality. From a report: The French government announced it is devising a "tough, concrete" plan to make the gender pay gap as much a thing of the past as Madame DeFarge's knitting habit. Per the Associated Press, France's plan for pay equity is still a work in progress. However, legislators may require companies to release the average salaries of their male and female employees and analyze them for disparities.

14 of 293 comments (clear)

  1. Fair Comparison by dentree4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As long as they release salaries *and* hours worked for a fair comparison, I'm ok with this.

    1. Re:Fair Comparison by erapert · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They must go further and quantify and release data about actual productivity.
      It should go without saying that age, experience, and skill set stats must also be included.
      And while we're at it, we should also make a note to release all info about who knows who and for how long as well as stats on who has been on which project for how long.
      Y'know, now that I think about, it's probably also crucial to get some figures on who lives in which neighborhood because the cost of living and thus also salaries varies by region.


      What if we just cut to the chase and straight up mandate how much companies must pay their workers?
      Surely that won't drive jobs away... because we'll all be so multi-cultural and anti-sexists that our utopia will be the only place that anyone will ever want to work!

    2. Re:Fair Comparison by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And, they must go even further and release data about employees pursuing raises and promotions, actual histories of changing jobs for better pay or positions, being willing and actually doing less desirable jobs for better pay (night shifts, rotating shifts, etc) . And, then correlate this information across entire employee careers to quantify the exact effect each of these things have on compensation.

      --
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    3. Re:Fair Comparison by Richard_at_work · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are multiple issues which are regularly conflated in these discussions, and often some of those issues are almost deliberately hidden in order to push the discussion in one particular direct (that direction being that any disparity is bad).

      The UK just forced the top 500 companies to release this sort of information, and at a glance some of them are really bad - EasyJet (a budget airline) has a gap of over 50%, or in other words the average difference between wages paid to women is 50% that of wages paid to men. Except that men tend to be employed in the company as pilots, and women as cabin crew, which have massive differences - and it remains to be proven if that is a company culture issue or not (my guess is, not, as many airline pilots are ex-military pilots, and we are only just seeing an improvement in female military pilots, so perhaps this will resolve itself in due course).

      Then you have the issue of the career gap, where women take time off to have children and return to work a year behind their male counterparts in experience, exposure etc. A very difficult one to solve - do you gift those women a year, do you hold back men for a year, what?

      And yes, there are the outright legitimate arguments about women simply being paid less because they are women, and there are also the kinda legitimate arguments about different negotiating styles between sexes being an issue (but then that all depends on the job - my wife is a doctor, and a quick straw poll of her friends suggests she can demand a higher day rate as a locum precisely because she is female - more women want a female doctor for female issues, which is a good negotiating area for the locum).

      Solving the legitimate issues doesn't however solve all the issues, but no one has worked out how to solve those ones without penalising companies and male workers (but some wouldn't see an issue with that at all).

      Just publishing the wage gap is meaningless flame bait without a lot more information around that gap.

    4. Re: Fair Comparison by magzteel · · Score: 4, Informative

      Gender and racial inequality holds across all job classifications.
      Chart #7 of this series http://www.epi.org/publication...

      I picked one line from that chart, retail salespersons. According to that chart, black female retail salespersons make $10.99/hr while white males make $20.12/hr

      The bureau of labor statistics charts explain why: https://www.bls.gov/oes/curren...

      If you are working sales in a retail store the average wage is around $11/hr
      But if you are working sales in the manufacturing industries the salaries are $20+/hr

      The EPI chart clearly doesn't adjust by industry. As usual, if you want to make more get a job that pays more.

    5. Re:Fair Comparison by epyT-R · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Whoever makes the claim should make the case. All of this "listen and believe" crap we get is why fewer and fewer take the accusations at face value.

    6. Re: Fair Comparison by epyT-R · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There cannot be perfect equality, but when one aggregates a huge sample, the statistical centers for each gender group should be roughly the same, because with a large enough sample, individual deviations for things like actual hours worked and the strengths and weaknesses for particular work-related skills should even-out.

      This is a false assumption because it assumes that men and women are essentially the same minus some plumbing. This couldn't be further from the truth. Sex is an example of diversity so it puzzles me why progressives expect equal outcome. Trying to force it is illiberal and immoral. It demonizes men and infantilizes women.

      It's possible that there are careers that would favor one gender over another, but those are mostly lower-skilled jobs that require brute strength. Even a lot of low-skill jobs should be roughly at parity, because there are a lot of labor-saving devices that any able-bodied individual can use.

      There are fundamental biological differences at work. It's not just plumbing and muscles. The neurology and endocrinology is different too, and that affects temperament and imperatives which in turn affect life choices and priorities.

      Neither gender really has any advantage over the other in this scenario, so there should be no reason to pay either gender more than the other for this sort of work.

      From this I can tell you've never worked a day in a factory of any sort.

  2. Wait, what? by olsmeister · · Score: 5, Funny

    I hadn't heard about France declaring war on Iceland and Germany!

  3. Thanks Europe! by Jfetjunky · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Good to know our U.S. government aren't the only idiots to declare war on ideological and intangible things.

    You want to fix a problem, then work towards a solution instead of chest-beating and pretending to "declare war" on it.

    1. Re:Thanks Europe! by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It isn't even a real problem.

      analysis of 2,000 communities by a market research company, in 147 out of 150 of the biggest cities in the U.S., the median full-time salaries of young women are 8% higher

      The thing about a real market economy, is that if you could end up paying women whatever % less than men, you'd hire more women, everything else being equal.

      The problem is, not everything else is equal. Women will forgo wage increases to stay closer to home, with the kids, during the 18 years or so it takes to raise them to adulthood. That has profound long term effects on wages. BTW, Stay at home dads suffer just as much, but get no sympathy from the Feminists.

      This isn't about equality, this is about "feelings" about equality. After all, if you're against "wage fairness" you're obviously a misogynist" who hates women. Facts don't matter.

      --
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  4. Awesome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Will I get to take years off for maternity leave, and expect my job waiting for me?

    Because in the real world, I lost my position because I took two months off to recover from having spinal fusion to have a tumor removed from my spinal cord.

    That's the fucking real world, where a baby is a "special kind of tumor".

  5. what gender pay gap? by Cederic · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is going to get messy. How do France surrender to something that doesn't exist?

  6. There is no wage gap by RightwingNutjob · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is a myth being sold to cover up yet another governmental power-grab. Equal pay for equal performance is the only possible outcome in anything resembling a free market. If a woman could be payed less for the same job, there would be near 100% male unemployment in just about every job besides sperm donor. Any aggregate disparaties between wages of *all* men and *all* women are the outcomes of individual choices made by consenting adults evaluating what's best for them in terms of career and life outside of work and any disparties if compensation for the same job title are largely the result of individual choices about the level of effort and amount of brownnosing applied to the job as opposed to having a life outside of work.

  7. Recipe for disaster by kenh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    However, legislators may require companies to release the average salaries of their male and female employees and analyze them for disparities.

    This type of analysis was tried in the US a few years ago, the politicians found pay disparities on gender when they simply did as discussed above (no surprise), but once they factored in things like comparing same jobs and years experience the pay disparity went away.

    To save face, proponents liedand claimed the initial comparison was for men and women doing 'exactly the same job' (when it clearly wasn't) and those that believed there was gender-based pay inequities never challenged findings they already believed.

    --
    Ken