Pay equity vs. pay equality: knowing the difference
Pay equity and pay equality may sound similar, but they have important differences HR leaders should understand. Learn what those differences are once and for all.
Published: 26 June 2024 | by Natasha K. A. Wiebusch, Brightmine Marketing Content Manager
Companies that excel in pay equity see higher profits, improved customer satisfaction and higher talent success rates, according to the Josh Bersin Company’s recent Definitive Guide to Pay Equity research. Unfortunately, despite the clear benefits, progress has been slow.
Today, the pay gap between men and women remains ever present…and stubborn. According to the 2023 gender pay gap data, the gender pay gap is 9.1%. This is only a .1% improvement from 2022.
But in the years since the pandemic, employees have seen a welcome change. That is, in the race to attract and retain talent, employers have renewed their commitments to eradicate pay inequity. Employers across the UK have implemented pay equity strategies to ensure not only gender pay equity, but also fair pay across other demographics.
A key piece of these strategies is understanding the difference between pay equity and pay equality. In this article, we explain what the difference is and why it’s important.
What is pay equality?
Pay equality is the concept of providing equal pay for equal work. It means employees should be paid the same amount for doing comparable work regardless of their sex, gender, race or other characteristics.
Pay equality is at the center of pay discrimination. That is, if an organisation is paying a man and a woman differently for like work, work that is rated as equivalent or work of equal value, they are likely violating the law.
Organisations can pay employees more based on practical differences, such as increased duties, level of responsibility or skills. However, all else being equal, pay discrepancies based on sex result in illegal unequal pay, leading to a significant risk for organisations.
What is pay equity?
Pay equity is the concept of ensuring equitable pay among all employees regardless of sex, gender, race or other characteristics. Pay equity practices seek to reduce disparities among employees of diverse backgrounds.
Unlike pay equality, pay equity is not solely focused on comparing pay among employees doing the same job. It also accounts for societal barriers, biases and stereotypes that contribute to disparities in pay.
For example, an organisation may experience pay inequity if it has an over-representation of women in lower paying job roles. Though there is no instance of pay discrimination, the unequal representation of women causes a gender pay disparity.
Why knowing the difference is important
Understanding pay equity vs pay equality is important because it helps you shape a holistic pay equity strategy. If you understand the nuances of these terms, you can build a strategy that ensures equal pay and equitable opportunities and growth for all employees.
Creating a pay equity strategy also requires HR and other leaders to communicate efforts to the wider organisation. Here, it’s extremely important that communications are clear about what key terms, such pay equity, mean to the organisation.
For example, if you announce a pay equity initiative without more information, employees may believe this is limited to eliminating pay discrimination. With proper onboarding and explanation, employees can come to fully understand that pay equity involves more than pay equality.
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Achieving pay equity
Achieving pay equity in your organisation is a long-term strategy. It requires finding the right information; ensuring HR, business leaders and managers are on the same page; and creating sustainable solutions. The following recommendations can help you get started:
Conduct a pay equity analysis
Analysing pay equity in your organisation will require a pay equity audit. Audits involve collecting pay data alongside employee demographic information to identify patterns, trends and disparities.
Specifically, an in-depth audit enables an analysis that identifies wage gaps caused by pay inequality and other disparities. For example, an audit may identify opportunity gaps — which contribute to wage gaps — in specific departments or leadership roles.
With the right pay equity solution, conducting an audit for pay equity can provide your organisation with the information you need to remediate existing and future disparities. And the visibility over your pay data will help you create a fair compensation strategy moving forward.
Know the laws that govern pay equity
Employers must also comply with the Equality Act of 2010 which prohibits pay discrimination and requires employers with 250 or more employees to disclose their pay gaps annually.
Employers operating in the US must also comply with a network of pay equity and transparency laws, including the Equal Pay Act of 1963, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Americans with Disabilities Act.
In addition to having a basic understanding of these laws, consult with legal counsel to ensure the organisation’s practices and policies are in compliance. Remember that communications with legal counsel are protected by attorney-client privilege.
Implement strategies that improve pay equality and equity
To improve pay equity holistically, build a strategy that addresses both pay equality and (more broadly) pay equity.
Pay equality efforts are actions that reduce disparities in pay among employees doing the same or substantially the same work. They include:
- Regularly auditing pay to identify unequal pay or outliers.
- Creating structured processes to ensure performance reviews are objective.
- Establishing clear salary ranges.
- Practicing pay transparency.
Pay equity strategies, which go beyond ensuring equal pay, include:
- Improving candidate pools, thereby increasing their size and diversity.
- Ensuring job descriptions are inclusive and free of gendered language.
- Evaluating pay in job roles that may be historically underpaid.
- Establishing formalised mentorship programs to support career progression.
- Other efforts focused on improving diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI).
Train managers on pay equity concepts and responsibilities
Managers play a central role in ensuring pay equity in the organisation. First, they help set the tone for the organisation’s culture, making their buy-in essential to gaining support for fair pay practices from employees. They are also leaders in the organisation’s strategic initiatives, often charged with setting priorities and managing budgets.
In addition to setting the tone of the organisation, managers make key decisions that impact pay equity. They influence key moments in an employee’s journey, from initial salaries and raises to promotions and opportunities.
Because they are so intimately involved in decisions that impact an employee’s pay and growth in the organisation, managers must be prepared to communicate about and advocate for fair pay. At the outset, managers should understand:
- The difference between pay equity and pay equality.
- What pay discrimination is and how it manifests.
- The importance of pay equity.
Managers must also know its business benefits. Beyond supporting a diverse and inclusive work environment, this includes increased ROI, productivity and revenue, and decreased labour turnover.
Managers must also understand their pay equity responsibilities. If leaders aren’t held accountable at important moments, such as performance reviews, organisations run the risk of undermining their pay equity strategy.
Measure your progress
As you continue on your journey to achieving pay equity, be sure monitor your progress through data. By leveraging continuous pay data, you can monitor wage gaps, pay practices and people decisions that impact pay.
You’ll also want to review key metrics, such as:
- Promotion rates by demographic.
- Average salary increase and performance review scores.
- Participation rates in mentorship programs.
- DEI-related recruitment and hiring metrics.
These metrics, when analysed together with pay data, will help you measure how successful your equity efforts (beyond pay adjustments) have been. Most importantly, it will help you make necessary adjustments.
A final word
Pay equality is a top priority for employers. As one piece of the pay equity puzzle, employers must be able to address it to make real progress on pay equity.
And as organisations continue on their greater pay equity journey, it’s important to remember that each journey is unique. Pay equity leaders and business stakeholders must consider their culture, people strategy and budget constraints — which may change over time. To get pay equity right, leaders will need to find the right fair compensation practices for their employees and their business.
Brightmine provides quality analytics and reliable data to transform your organisation’s approach to pay equality and pay equity. Find out more here.
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About the author
Natasha K. A. Wiebusch
Marketing Content Manager, Brightmine
Natasha K. A. Wiebusch is the marketing content manager at Brightmine. Before transitioning to the marketing team, she covered a variety of topics as a Brightmine legal editor, including benefits, compensation, workplace flexibility, and the future of work.
Natasha holds a Bachelor of Science in communication science and rhetorical studies from the University of Wisconsin – Madison and a juris doctor from the University of Wisconsin Law School. Prior to joining Brightmine, Natasha was a practicing attorney and HR compliance and training specialist.
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