The gender pay gap locally has shrunk by 7.5%

The gender pay gap for full-time workers in South Lanarkshire has shrunk considerably over the last year, official figures reveal.
The 50 plus age group have not seen the same changes younger employees have in the gender pay gap situation.The 50 plus age group have not seen the same changes younger employees have in the gender pay gap situation.
The 50 plus age group have not seen the same changes younger employees have in the gender pay gap situation.

It now stands at 4.4 per cent hourly, compared to 11.9 per cent in 2018, Office for National Statistics data shows.

They reveal women take home an average annual salary of £28,325 – £4,372 less than the average man’s salary of £32,697.

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The average pay figures, for workers who live in South Lanarkshire, are calculated using a median, rather than mean, average, to stop them being skewed by particularly small or large pay packets.

Across the UK, male workers in full-time jobs now earn 8.9 per cent more than their female counterparts.

This represents a slight rise from 8.6 per cent last year, the first increase in six years.

But ONS statistician Roger Smith said the national increase was not “statistically significant”, adding it is too early to say if it marks a change in trend.

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“We also saw an increase in 2013 followed by a return to downward trend in subsequent years,” he added.

“However, the downward trend is a slow one regardless.”

For people aged under 40, the wage gap for full-time employees is now “close to zero”, the ONS said.

Yet it widens among 40 to 49 year olds to 11.4 per cent, stretching to more than 15 per cent among 50 to 59 year olds and those over 60 – a difference that is “not declining strongly over time”.

The ONS attributes this to older women being “more likely” to work in lower-paid jobs than younger ones, and less likely to fill managerial roles.

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In South Lanarkshire, the difference in pay between male and female workers, including those in part-time jobs, decreased from 18.4 per cent in 2018 to 10.2 per cent this year.

This divide can partly be explained by the number of women working part-time. An estimated 27,000 women in South Lanarkshire were in part-time work last year, around 41 per cent of the female workforce.”