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One of the most important things to get right when carrying out an Equal Pay Review (Audit) is Step 2, which identifies jobs involving similar levels of skill, knowledge, effort and responsibility. Jobs such as these are known as work of equal value.
The scheme or method used to identify these jobs should be analytical, and it should be free from sex bias. This means that it should not unfairly favour stereotypically male or female jobs.
To check that a job evaluation scheme is free from discrimination, the following questions may be useful.
- Are all groups of workers who should be included covered by the scheme? (If workers are excluded, are they predominantly male?)
- Is the evaluation panel gender balanced, and have the members had training in sex bias in job evaluation?
- Are job descriptions comprehensive, including all aspects of women’s jobs and not over-emphasising job characteristics missing from jobs typically performed by women?
- Have you carefully examined job titles which are predominantly applied to women, and have a counterpart applied predominantly to men, to ensure that these reflect genuine differences?
- Does the scheme give the demands of the woman’s job equal consideration with the demands of the man’s job?
- Does the scheme include, or properly take account of, all the demands of the woman’s job?
- Does the scheme give unjustifiably heavy weighting to demands that are more typical of the man’s job?
- Do the demands of predominantly female jobs have the same number of levels as the demands of predominantly male jobs?
- Is the method for scoring each reasonably similar?
- Where there are only a few points between jobs usually performed by men and similar jobs usually performed by women, have grade boundaries been selected so as to avoid creating male and female grades?
A toolkit to support smaller employers in carrying out job comparison for the purposes of determining equal value, is available from Close the Gap.
The EHRC has produced further detailed guidance on job evaluation schemes free of sex bias.
Download Equal Value Workbook, Equal Value Guide, Equal Pay Reviews and Job Evaluation: Guidance for Scotland's Colleges
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