After reading this chapter you should be able to:
Equal pay law in the United Kingdom began with the Equal Pay Act 1970, although this did not gain force until 1975. Together with the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, as well as later additional enactments and amendments, the Act was aimed first at complying with the requirements of what was then Article 119 EC Treaty (now Art 157 TFEU) and second at remedying what was unjustifiable discrimination against women.
The concept of equal pay developed not from English law but as part of what is now EU law. The concept of equal pay between men and women for equal work was inserted into the original Treaty because of the potential problems that would arise from the single market with no internal barriers to trade. Member states such as France, which has had the principle of equality from the time of the revolution, may well have suffered from an inability to compete with cheap imports from countries where there was large disparity between the pay of men and women at the time the Treaties were drafted. Equality developed as a general principle of EU law, so that in cases equality is an underlying principle which the judges would consider. Since the Treaty on European Unity (TEU) it is also established in the Treaties.
A number of potential problems did originally exist from having both EU and domestic law on equal pay.
Section 66 Equality Act 2010 now contains an equality clause.
So it is implied that a woman will receive equal treatment to a man doing equal work and, if a term in a woman’s contract is less favourable than a term in the man’s contract then the contract will be modified so as make both contracts as favourable as each other. This mirrors the equality clause that was originally in section 1 Equal Pay Act 1970.
Under section 65 Equality Act 2010 the work of fellow employees is equal if it is:
These are examined respectively in 10.2.3, 10.2.4 and 10.2.5 below.
The right approach for the court or tribunal is obviously to view the compared contracts term by term and to modify any term that is unfavourable. One problem that has surfaced is the 'whole contract' approach, the attitude posed by employers that the contract should not be viewed term by term but as a whole and if, even though she gets less pay than her male comparator, because a woman is getting different benefits that a man does not get that on the whole they are equally treated. This was an argument put forward in Hayward v Cammell Laird Shipbuilders Ltd (No 2) [1988] ICR 464. The argument was accepted by the tribunal which rejected the claim for equal pay. However, the House of Lords (now the Supreme Court) accepted that this would be to interfere with her rights under Article 157 TFEU (at the time Article 119 EC Treaty) (see 10.2.5 below).
One of the inevitable consequences of the approach is that it could result in a so-called 'piggy-back claim' where a man relies on a man making a claim for equal pay with a woman who has succeeded in a claim using a higher paid male comparator. This has recently been confirmed in Hartlepool Borough Council v Llewellyn [2009] IRLR 796.
Other contractual entitlements besides simply pay are also covered by the equality clause so should be considered in determining whether to grant equal pay. This can for example cover things such as concessionary travel facilities for the families of retired railway workers as in Garland v BREL 12/81; [1983] AC 751. The principle has also been applied in the case of unequal treatment in the case of contributions to pension schemes.
A primary requirement of bringing a claim for equal pay is that the comparator must be with a person of the opposite sex who is working in the same or associated employment. The principle is now contained in section 79 Equality Act 2010.
The Comparator should be employed at the same establishment or employed by an associated employer or at establishments which have common terms and conditions. The comparator must be typical with no personal considerations such as red circling or geographical considerations such as London weighting. The issue of common conditions was discussed in the case below.
The original interpretation of associated employer from the Equal Pay Act 1970 was also much more restrictive in the case of public sector workers than would be the case under EU law.
The more recent test in establishing whether the claimant and comparator can be said to be in the same or associated employment when they work at different establishments is whether their pay generates from the same source. This was the issue on the interpretation of Article 157 TFEU (at the time Article 119 EC Treaty) in Lawrence v Regent Office Care Ltd, Commercial Catering Group and Mitie Secure Services Ltd (Case C–320/00) [2002] ECR I–7325 (see 10.3.1 below). In Armstrong v Newcastle-upon-Tyne NHS Hospital Trust [2006] IRLR 124 female health service employees working for one NHS Trust were unable to use male workers in a different NHS Trust hospital as their comparators because the Trusts were independent of each other and there was not a single source for setting pay rates. In contrast in South Ayershire Council v Morton [2002] ICR 956 a teacher working for one local authority was able to use a male teacher working for a different local authority as a comparator because their pay was set by the same national agreement.
A claim is not possible against a hypothetical comparator as a result of which the original view of the UK courts was that the male comparator must be in contemporaneous employment with the female claiming equal pay. This was inevitably out of step with the broader interpretation of the ECJ.
The EAT in Diocese of Hallam Trustees v Connaughten [1996] 3 CMLR 93 applied the same principle to a female employee using the male who took over her job at much higher pay as a comparator. The disparity of pay in the case was extreme with the female being paid £11,138 per annum and her male successor receiving £20,000 per annum. Such comparisons are in any case now also indicated in section 64(2) Equality Act 2010 which identifies that a claim is not restricted to a comparator in contemporaneous employment.
A woman is also not prevented from selecting a comparator in a claim for work of equal value simply because there is a token male who the employer has engaged in the same role as the woman on the same pay. In Pickstone v Freemans plc [1988] ICR 697 the court held that the fact that there was a man on the same rate of pay as the woman was irrelevant if there was a genuine male comparator. The House of Lords acknowledged that the alternative would be to encourage unscrupulous behaviour by employers who would then have a mechanism to always avoid equal pay (see 10.2.5 below).
Work is defined as like work if it is the same or broadly similar in nature and any differences are of no significance. This is identified in section 65(2) Equality Act 2010.
So the work should be broadly similar and not necessarily identical and there can be differences as long as they are not significant.
A court or a tribunal obviously needs to take a broad view of the work done and ignore insignificant differences. Where differences are significant then they might be reflected in different pay rates. There are three usual examples.
A difference in working hours might justify different pay even though in other respects the work is broadly similar.
A difference in the duties performed might obviously justify different pay since the two employees would not in that case be engaged in like work.
However, the court or tribunal must consider what actually happens in practice before deciding that there are different duties which might justify a difference in pay as can be seen in the following two cases.
Where a male employee has different, meaning greater, responsibilities than a female employee then a difference in pay might be justified.
Clearly to justify a difference in pay any alleged responsibility must be regular one not just an occasional one.
An action for work rated equivalent was originally under section 1(5) Equal Pay Act 1970. This was where an employer had voluntarily engaged in a job evaluation study which had identified that the jobs of male and female comparators would be of equal value and the pay should therefore be equal and would be if it were not based on a sex-specific system of values. The action is now under Section 65(4) Equality Act 2010.
Job evaluation studies rate jobs according to the demands made upon the individual employee in various set factors including skill, effort, responsibility, decision making. Job evaluation studies are gender neutral where a sex specific system sets different values for men and women.
Where a genuine scheme has occurred then its findings should be implemented.
Different types of study have been developed as was pointed out by the EAT in Eaton Ltd v Nuttall [1977] IRLR 71 such as job ranking, paired comparisons, job classification, points assessment and factor comparison.
Any genuine study then must be objectively applied and analytical with the separate factors in each job compared, so 'whole job' comparisons are not really adequate for this purpose.
The definition of a claim for equal pay for work of equal value is now contained in section 65(6) Equality Act 2010.
A claim for equal pay for work of equal value was actually inserted into the Equal Pay Act as section 2A(1)(a) by Regulation 2 of the Equal Pay (Amendment) Regulations 1983. This extra head of claim was added because it was lacking in the original Equal Pay Act and the UK then failed to fully implement the requirements of Article 119 EC treaty (now Article 157 TFEU) as expanded in the then Equal Pay Directive 75/117 (now part of the Recast Directive 2006/54). This subsequently led to infringement proceedings in the European Court of Justice in Commission v UK 61/81. In the case the argument made by the UK that the concept of 'equal value' was too abstract to stand application was rejected by the court.
An action for equal pay for work of equal value, as section 65(6) Equality Act 2010 identifies, may be brought when there is no male comparator doing like work or there is no work rated as equivalent in a genuine job evaluation study.
The process is now governed by section 131 Equality Act 2010 and regulations contained in Schedule 6 of the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of Procedure) (Amendment) Regulations 2004 which also set maximum timescales of twenty-five weeks if no independent expert is used and thirty-seven weeks if independent experts are used. The previous procedure was long-winded and full of potential delays with the average time taken to complete claims being two-and-a-half years, a real disincentive to claiming.
Claims can obviously be quite complex and take time to resolve because a number of comparators may be used.
It is possible for a woman to pursue a claim for equal pay for work of equal value despite there being other men on the same wage provided that there is a male comparator on a higher wage.
Traditionally an employer had a defence to an equal pay claim where he could show that the difference in pay was due to a genuine material factor where the difference in pay was not based on the person’s sex. This defence is now contained in section 69 Equality Act 2010.
There have been a variety of contexts in which employers have argued that a genuine material factor justifies differences in pay.
Geographical location may be a justification for differences in pay. This operates where national employers have employees at different locations around the country and living costs can vary. A classic example was the challenge to what is known as London weighting in NAAFI v Varley [1976] The Times 25 October. Men and women might be doing the same work but in different parts of the country where living costs are much higher and therefore employers have to offer better rates of pay to attract staff.
We have seen in 10.2.3 above that different duties and responsibilities may mean that the work is not in fact taken as being broadly similar.
This has particularly risen in relation to different treatment of part-time employees by contrast to their full-time counterparts and has been considered also by the ECJ.
The need to attract staff with particular skills or where skills are scarce can also be a factor that has been accepted as justifying paying higher rates than might be the case with the existing workforce.
However, there are limits to how far an argument of market forces will be accepted when the reality is that the pay differential is in fact discriminatory.
It may also be possible to argue that the difference in pay is justified because the nature of the man’s role involves unsocial elements and inconvenience not present in the woman’s.
The decision is possibly at odds with the principle that a woman employed in a female dominated occupation can still bring a claim using a comparator from a male dominated occupation.
This involves salaries that are protected for some reason. This will usually occur where an employee has had to accept redeployment into a lower paid job or because the employee is unable to continue in the same role, for instance because of health issues. The employer wishes to retain the employee and keeps him on the same pay even though he is working in a role on a lesser pay grade.
It may be possible to justify this and use it as a defence if the decision to 'red circle' the previous wage was not made on a discriminatory basis.
However, 'red circling' is not a guarantee of a defence of genuine material factor and an employer should not think that there is an automatic right to carry on such a practice since it is also potentially offensive to the remainder of the workforce. A temporary situation is more likely to succeed than a permanent situation. In any case the significant question is why the pay has been 'red circled' and whether or not this is discriminatory. If it is then the defence is not available.
Many forms of employment use incremental pay scales. Employees get an incremental increase in salary for each year of service until they reach the top of the pay scale. This may justify differences in pay since it is recognition of the extra experience that the employee has and therefore could be linked to productivity or capability.
However, the practice could also be discriminatory to women in the sense that since because of maternity and the child care responsibilities it is possible at any given time that there are a greater number of male employees with advanced service. The ECJ has considered this in detail and determined that while the practice may be justified it must be objectively justified.
A claim for equal pay must be brought to the tribunal during the course of employment or within six months of leaving. Application is made on the same forms as for other claims. There is no right to extend this limit. However, the period may be extended if it is shown that the employer deliberately concealed information and that without this the employee could not have reasonably been expected to bring the claim in time.
The procedure for making a claim for equal pay for work of equal value is now governed by section 131 Equality Act 2010 and regulations contained in Schedule 6 of the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of Procedure) (Amendment) Regulations 2004 which set maximum timescales of twenty-five weeks if no independent expert is used and thirty-seven weeks if independent experts are used.
The procedure has two stages. Stage 1 will apply to all claims and the tribunal determines whether the claim should proceed and also whether to hear it itself or whether to appoint independent experts from ACAS. In Stage 2 any disputed facts are resolved and experts, if used will prepare a report. After this there is a full hearing at which the issue whether to award equal pay is decided.
There are essentially two aspects to any award for equal pay:
Thus the contractual obligations of the employer and rights of the employee are in effect changed.
The arrears can be backdated for a period of up to six years from the date when the claim was brought. This follows the change made by the Equal Pay Act (Amendment) Regulations 2003 to the old maximum of two years. This change arose because of the finding in the ECJ in Preston and Others v Wolverhampton Healthcare NHS Trust (C-78/98) [2000] ECR I-3201 that the then restriction was in breach of EU law.
Originally Article 119 of the EC Treaty identified that men and women should receive equal pay for equal work. Following renumbering under the Amsterdam Treaty this became Article 141 EC Treaty. Following the replacement of the EC Treaty with the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) the principle is now contained in Article 157 TFEU.
The principle is a simply stated one and was originally under Article 119 EC Treaty mainly a part of the economic agenda of securing a single market (at that time referred to as the common market). It was established at a relatively early stage that the Article was directly effective (see Chapter 2.2.3) and therefore is enforceable by a citizen of the EU in a national court of a Member State.
One sad aside to the case followed representations made to the court by both the UK and Ireland who feared the effect the ruling could have. Following these representations the Article was held to be only prospectively, rather than retrospectively, directly effective as should have been the case. As a result many women in those Member States lost out on potential and justifiable claims which they otherwise might have made.
One important limitation on the scope of Article 157 was also identified by the ECJ in the case, that Article 157 can only be used in respect of 'equal work which is carried out in the same establishment or service’. In consequence a woman cannot claim equal pay with a man employed by a different employer even if they are doing exactly the same work. This was later confirmed and explained by the court.
The same principle was also later applied in a situation involving a comparison between permanent employees and agency workers.
The EC Treaty also defined pay quite broadly. The definition is now in Article 157(2) TFEU.
The definition of pay in the Article is not limited to 'wages' or 'salary'. It can include any form of remuneration which does not have to be in the form of money. The definition has also been very broadly construed by the ECJ in case law. Examples of what has been accepted as pay for the purposes of Article 157 have included the following:
The occupational pension scheme in the Bilka Kaufhaus case was one that supplemented the state pension scheme. In a later judgment the ECJ identified that the definition under Article 157(2) also covered so-called 'contracted out' schemes, ones designed in effect to replace the state scheme.
The ruling proved quite controversial and, because of the potential effects on contracted out schemes the court decided to apply the ruling prospectively and not retrospectively. The case also led to several preliminary rulings, mainly from the UK and the Netherlands.
Pay was originally covered by the Equal Pay Directive 75/117. This is now in the Recast Directive 2006/54.
The Court of Justice has identified in Macarthys Ltd v Smith (Case 129/79) [1980] ECR 1275,that 'equal work' does not necessarily have to mean identical work but work with a high degree of similarity.
In the case of work of equal value this is a question of fact for the national court to determine whether work is of equal value. Although determining exactly how different jobs should be assessed has been problematic. Article 4 of Directive 2006/54 (the recast Directive) gives some guidance. It states that 'where a job classification system is used for determining pay, it must be based on the same criteria for both men and women and so drawn up as to exclude any discrimination on grounds of sex'.
The ECJ has also developed the test for how to measure what is objective justification for differences in pay. In Bilka Kaufhaus GmbH v Weber von Hartz [1987] ICR 110 the ECJ held that national courts should decide whether there is a real need to apply different rules for part-timers, but that there must be objective justification. It identified the criteria for establishing objective justification:
It is also important to note that the court will not accept that the mere fact that a system for job classification for determining salary scales is apparently neutral guarantees that it is not discriminatory.
One significant failing in equal pay legislation is that, while it may lead to an aggrieved party gaining equal pay this does not necessarily mean that she gains the pay that she deserves in the light of the evidence.
The anomaly here is that the women received equal pay with the men when they should in fact and in fairness have been receiving higher pay.
Emir, Astra, Selwyn’s Law of Employment 17th edition. Oxford University Press, 2012, Chapter 5.
Pitt, Gwyneth, Cases and Materials on Employment Law 3rd edition. Pearson, 2008, Chapter 7.
Sargeant, Malcolm and Lewis, David, Employment Law 6th edition. Pearson, 2012, Chapter 5.3.
Storey, Tony and Turner, Chris, Unlocking EU Law 3rd edition. Hodder Education, 2011, Chapter 18.
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