Downing Street statement on today’s Civil
Service Gender Pay statistics.
Key findings:
-
The overall gender pay gap for the Civil
Service fell from 13.6% in 2016 to 12.7% in 2017. This is
significantly lower than the overall UK pay gap of 18.4% and
23.7% seen in the private sector.
-
The gender pay gap for the public sector as a
whole is now 19.4%, compared to 23.7% in the private
sector.
-
The Civil Service is taking a number of steps
to continue to improve, including:
-
launching guidance on diverse panels to limit
the impact of unconscious bias in selection;
-
ensuring recruiters for the Civil Service
focus harder on attraction and fair selection;
-
taking action to improve the diversity of our
talent programmes to make us more representative at the most
senior grades;
-
striving to create a working environment where
everyone can be themselves, so they can thrive personally,
perform at their best and be fairly rewarded as part of ‘A
Brilliant Civil Service’.
-
The recently launched Diversity and Inclusion
Strategy sets out how the Civil Service will become the most
inclusive employer by 2020.
A Number 10 spokesperson
said:
“Closing the gender pay gap is good for the
economy, good for individuals and good for business, which is why
this Government has gone further than ever before in tackling
this issue by introducing world-leading legislation for gender
pay reporting.
“This will provide unprecedented transparency,
generate wider debate and encourage employers to take the action
to close the gap and make workplaces across the UK fairer.
“The Civil Service has been leading the way by
publishing its gender pay gap figures for a number of years as
part of the annual Civil Service statistics, and so we are
pleased to see that the Civil Service gender pay gap is
narrowing, and remains significantly lower than in the private
sector.
“But of course there is still more to do and we
need to build on this progress to continue leading by example and
improve the gender balance across all departments, agencies and
professions.”