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Last edited 12 Aug 2022
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Gender pay gap in construction

Women.jpg

On 5th April 2018, companies across Great Britain revealed the extent of the gender pay gap, eight years after the new law was first proposed.

The data showed that, across all industries, women were being paid a median hourly rate on average 9.7% lower than that their male colleagues. However, construction ranks as one of the worst industry’s for pay inequality, with women paid 36% less than men on average.

Companies with more than 250 staff filed data based on a snapshot of their payroll taken on 5th April 2017. Some of the leading building firms in the UK were revealed to pay women of around a quarter less than men on average, while the biggest discrepancy was the country’s largest housebuilder Barratt, which reported a 34.2% difference. The UK’s largest contractor, Balfour Beatty, reported a pay gap of 33%.

Contractor Laing O’Rourke had some cause for optimism as they reported the lowest pay gap (just under 9%) among the top 30 main contractors.

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Related articles

  • Access and inclusion in the built environment: policy and guidance.
  • Celebrating women in engineering.
  • Civil engineering and language.
  • Construction organisations and strategy.
  • Corporate social responsibility in construction.
  • Diversity in the construction industry.
  • Emotional Intelligence in Construction.
  • Equal opportunities policy.
  • Equality Act.
  • Gender stereotypes examined in Unlimited Potential report.
  • Inclusivity in engineering.
  • International Women in Engineering Day 2018.
  • International Women in Engineering Day 2020.
  • National Infrastructure Plan for Skills.
  • Recruiting and retaining talent in the construction industry.
  • Skills shortage.
  • Women in the construction industry.
  • Women's Engineering Society.
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