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Mike's Minute: Gender pay gap solutions are artificial

An episode of the Best of Business podcast, hosted by Newstalk ZB, titled "Mike's Minute: Gender pay gap solutions are artificial" was published on May 5, 2022 and runs 1 minutes.

May 5, 2022 ·1m · Best of Business

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Another of these strange made up claims this week masquerading as a report that suggests the solving of a problem, or perceived problem, can only happen if we changed the way we did things. A group called Mind the Gap likes the idea of forcing...

Another of these strange made up claims this week masquerading as a report that suggests the solving of a problem, or perceived problem, can only happen if we changed the way we did things.
A group called Mind the Gap likes the idea of forcing companies to publish their wages on a gender basis thus embarrassing them in paying more to women.
The claim is, if we did this, we could increase females' pay by up to $35 a week.
The gap on average is currently 9 percent. The reason it's 9 percent is not because people who employ other people don’t like women. It's because women, on the whole, choose different jobs than men, on the whole.
The key there is “on the whole.” This is where you get a distorted view of the world when you average everything out.
Women frequent the aged care sector, for example, more than men. We have been here before, of course. The famous pay equity case involving aged care where we ended up comparing aged care women with mechanics who are men and pretending apples were apples.
There is an inquiry currently underway in Australia looking at the same thing. The warnings are out over whether it addresses anything. In our case, some in the aged care sector got more money. But it still didn’t solve the overall problem, and that was attracting people to the industry.
Artificiality is almost always a mistake. Do you hire women on skill and talent? Or do you hire women so you can close a gap on a chart? The same mad argument applies to the debate over numbers of female CEOs and board members
We must also remember a couple of important things. People must choose what they want to do for work and money is not always a driving force.
If women, on average, chose professions that don’t pay as much as other professions, that’s not automatically a problem. And if, on average, the person who happens to be female earns less than she could if only she changed jobs, but is happy, then that’s not a problem either.
Trying to ratchet your square peg into the round hole you think is fair and equitable is only going to cause trouble because it’s a false economy.
Remuneration is based on demand, supply, and skills, not gender.

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Best Of Health Business RadioX ® Business RadioX® is amplifying the voice of business by sharing unscripted conversations from local business leaders serving their market, their community, and their profession. Business for Breakfast Ken Morgan and Julie Dougherty Business for Breakfast is fresh, fun, and guaranteed to start your business day the right way! Ken Morgan and Julie Dougherty host the Phoenix radio version of the show, and Francoise Rhodes hosts in Palm Springs, California. We take the best of Business for Breakfast interviews each week and pack them into this dynamic show. Tune in each week to hear intriguing interviews with business and market news makers. On the Record by Leadpages Leadpages Welcome to "On the Record," the podcast that blends the best of business and music. Join us as we dive into timely, topical happenings in the business world. Our guests offer thought-provoking opinions and insights to help you scale your ideas, and our hard-hitting subject matter doesn't shy away from taking an unpopular stance. We’re disruptors and we don't apologize for it. Along the way, we'll sprinkle in discussions about our personal music interests, relating them back to the topic at hand and exploring the marketing lessons hidden inside the music. Bluyonder Voices Greg Whitby Greg Whitby is the Executive Director of Catholic Education Diocese of Parramatta. He has been involved in education in both government and non government sectors for over 40 years as a teacher and school leader as well as lecturing on a part-time basis for 10 years in the faculty of business at the University of Western Sydney. Greg has led large systems of schools for over 17 years.Greg is widely recognised as an experienced educator who is focused on transforming schools, bringing together the best of theory, practice and evidence to ensure they provide a relevant, challenging and engaging contemporary learning experience for the communities they serve. Greg is a passionate and relentless leader who drives innovation and change in education.
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