Government Equalities Office 'considering gender pay gap reporting for small firms'

11 Jun 2019

The Government Equalities Office has recommended extending the gender pay gap reporting initiative to include small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

Currently, only employers with 250 employees or more are required by law to publish their gender pay gap figures on their website and report their pay gap data to the government via its gender pay gap reporting service.

Hilary Spencer, Director of the Government Equalities Office, told the Treasury Select Committee: 'There's a number of ways we could take reporting in the future. One option is to lower the threshold, another option is to ask for more data on gender, and another is to ask for data about different characteristics.

'We're putting advice to ministers on ways we can take this forward, including ethnicity pay gap reporting.'

A range of proposals have been outlined, including expanding the range of data collected and giving the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) additional powers to issue immediate fines to businesses that fail to comply with the reporting requirements.

Home | Contact us | Accessibility | Disclaimer | Terms of engagement | Help | Site map |

© 2024 Gregory Priestley & Stewart. All rights reserved. | Gregory Priestley & Stewart, Lyndhurst, 1 Cranmer Street, Long Eaton, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire NG10 1NJ

We use cookies on this website, you can find more information about cookies here.

Please read our diversity survey summary.

0115 973 3389

Gregory Priestley & Stewart
Lyndhurst
1 Cranmer Street
Long Eaton
Nottingham
Nottinghamshire
NG10 1NJ

01623 555 656

Gregory Priestley & Stewart
Alexandra House
123 Priestsic Road
Sutton-in-Ashfield
Nottinghamshire
NG17 4EA