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Pay transparency and unequal pay for equal work: Devising an effective regulatory framework

Pay transparency and unequal pay for equal work: Devising an effective regulatory framework
Pay transparency and unequal pay for equal work: Devising an effective regulatory framework
Despite being guaranteed by UK law since 1975, the right to equal pay continues to be inhibited, in part by a pervasive culture of pay secrecy. In this thesis, it is argued that strengthening compliance with equal pay law can only be achieved by imposing duties on employers to ensure their pay systems are not discriminatory, and by easing the burden of information gathering on employees who want to discover whether they are receiving discriminatory pay. To achieve this, this thesis proposes the introduction of a regulatory framework of mandatory pay transparency measures in the UK, that shifts much of the burden onto employers to prevent pay discrimination from occurring.

Drawing together economic, reflexive regulatory, and social accounting theories of information disclosure and regulatory compliance, an original theoretical framework is developed, against which the strengths and weaknesses of pay transparency can be measured. Using this theoretical framework, three case studies are conducted to analyse the design and efficacy of existing pay transparency measures, namely equal pay auditing, gender pay gap reporting and equal pay certification. Findings from these case studies are then used to inform the proposed introduction of a mandatory equal pay certification system for most UK employers across the public, private and voluntary sectors, and a right for employees to request colleagues’ pay information from their employers. It is argued that this framework of pay transparency measures can address the lack of understanding of both employers and employees of the existence and extent of unequal pay, prompt employers to take proactive steps to eliminate potentially discriminatory pay practices, and give victims of unequal pay the information they need to enforce their legal rights.
University of Southampton
Patrick, Alex
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Patrick, Alex
36640002-ddb3-42a2-b623-686515358fa5
Pearson, Megan
fc57169e-5c44-405a-9d80-806ade39c1f2
Delgado, Natalia
f1907d8d-1b42-424b-ac4c-772be61fb47c
Gibbs, Alun
c8a57ffe-7bf9-4ca1-a2d9-523f37647229

Patrick, Alex (2023) Pay transparency and unequal pay for equal work: Devising an effective regulatory framework. University of Southampton, Doctoral Thesis, 351pp.

Record type: Thesis (Doctoral)

Abstract

Despite being guaranteed by UK law since 1975, the right to equal pay continues to be inhibited, in part by a pervasive culture of pay secrecy. In this thesis, it is argued that strengthening compliance with equal pay law can only be achieved by imposing duties on employers to ensure their pay systems are not discriminatory, and by easing the burden of information gathering on employees who want to discover whether they are receiving discriminatory pay. To achieve this, this thesis proposes the introduction of a regulatory framework of mandatory pay transparency measures in the UK, that shifts much of the burden onto employers to prevent pay discrimination from occurring.

Drawing together economic, reflexive regulatory, and social accounting theories of information disclosure and regulatory compliance, an original theoretical framework is developed, against which the strengths and weaknesses of pay transparency can be measured. Using this theoretical framework, three case studies are conducted to analyse the design and efficacy of existing pay transparency measures, namely equal pay auditing, gender pay gap reporting and equal pay certification. Findings from these case studies are then used to inform the proposed introduction of a mandatory equal pay certification system for most UK employers across the public, private and voluntary sectors, and a right for employees to request colleagues’ pay information from their employers. It is argued that this framework of pay transparency measures can address the lack of understanding of both employers and employees of the existence and extent of unequal pay, prompt employers to take proactive steps to eliminate potentially discriminatory pay practices, and give victims of unequal pay the information they need to enforce their legal rights.

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Patrick final thesis - Version of Record
Restricted to Repository staff only until 11 February 2026.
Available under License University of Southampton Thesis Licence.
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Final-thesis-submission-Examination-Ms-Alexandra-Patrick
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More information

Published date: 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 474233
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474233
PURE UUID: ec75eb3c-7b6e-41e5-9488-b1048218a2cf
ORCID for Alex Patrick: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1288-3969
ORCID for Megan Pearson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5330-4812
ORCID for Natalia Delgado: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7163-2804

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 16 Feb 2023 17:50
Last modified: 28 Mar 2024 02:50

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Contributors

Author: Alex Patrick ORCID iD
Thesis advisor: Megan Pearson ORCID iD
Thesis advisor: Natalia Delgado ORCID iD
Thesis advisor: Alun Gibbs

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