A Closer Look at The EU Pay Transparency Directive
The EU Pay Transparency Directive mandates that all 27 member countries must pass legislation
requiring companies
with at least 100 employees to publish pay gaps of 5 percent or more between men and women doing similar work. Pay
gaps include wages, as well as pensions, defined contribution retirement plans and other benefits. This highlights
the need for employers to understand the value of their benefits, how that value varies between employees performing
the same category of work and whether those gaps can be explained by objective reasons.
Other requirements of the directive include:
- Employers must disclose how pay is set, progressed and managed, details on promotion and progression criteria,
as well as the existing pay gap between female and male workers.
- Job applicants will also have the right to receive information on the initial pay level/range for any advertised
position. Employers cannot ask about previous or current pay, nor prohibit employees from discussing pay.
- Employers must have tools to compare and assess pay levels. Those levels must be based on gender-neutral
criteria and include gender-neutral job evaluation/classification systems. This could represent a significant
change for any employers who do not have a job architecture underpinned by a recognized analytical job
evaluation methodology.
- Although most countries already have pay equity mechanisms, they will have to certify they meet the directive's
terms. For those without pay equity programs, this will be a substantial change.
Beyond the EU directive, companies will need to comply with pay transparency mandates in more than two dozen
countries, including Australia, Canada, Japan and various U.S. states and cities. These mandates range from
requiring several companies to post salary ranges in job postings to Iceland’ s Jafnlaunavottunu,4 a pay
equity
certification that renews every three years. These regulations typically apply to companies that have or are
recruiting employees in the regulated jurisdiction, including multinational organizations.
While salary disclosures were the focus of early pay transparency discussions and regulations, the conversation has
expanded to include all elements of total rewards.