Goldman Sachs says U.K. women earn half as much per hour as men

Goldman Sachs pays women in the U.K. an average of 50.6 percent less than male colleagues per hour, although this is an improvement on the 56 percent gap the Wall Street firm reported a year ago.

For year-end bonuses the gap is much wider at 66.7 percent, which is also slightly better than the difference between genders last year, the bank said in a statement published Monday.

The figures reflect the imbalances that still exist at the biggest financial firms. HSBC Holdings Plc said earlier this year that its hourly pay gap between men and women had grown to 61 percent. The firm said employees are paid the same for similar roles but that women are often underrepresented in senior positions.

David Solomon, CEO of Goldman Sachs.
"I'm encouraged by capital markets activity," Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon said Tuesday. "I'm not going to say it's running back to 10-year averages right away, but it has materially improved."

Women at financial firms in the U.K. earn on average around 28 percent less than men do, according to nearly 100 companies in the financial sector that have reported so far this year. This is more than twice the average gender pay gap across all industries of around 13 percent.

Firms with U.K. offices are now reporting their second set of figures under rules introduced in 2017 requiring the data to be made public.

Goldman Chief Executive David Solomon said last week that the firm was fully committed to improve senior representation of women in the firm. In a memo to all staff, Solomon wrote: "Diversity and inclusion is a top priority at Goldman Sachs."

"We need to improve senior representation in order to change the results of these measures, and we are confident that the steps we've outlined will help us, over time, increase our representation of all diverse professionals at senior levels," Solomon said.

Richard Gnodde, CEO of Goldman Sachs International, said in Monday's announcement that his team "will be moving quickly to implement the new initiatives" outlined by Solomon. These include requiring interviews for open roles to include two or more qualified diverse candidates.

Bloomberg News
Diversity and equality Equal pay Goldman Sachs Women in Banking
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