From apprenticeships and qualifications to professional development and employability skills. Supporting learners, partners, and centres with tools to deliver, assess, and grow.
Join a professional community committed to excellence in management and leadership. Access exclusive resources, and recognition pathways including Chartered Manager.
Connect, celebrate, and lead with CMI’s vibrant community. From events and awards to networks and campaigns, get involved and help shape the future of management.
Stay informed with expert insights, thought leadership, and the latest in management. From in-depth features to practical guidance, explore the ideas shaping today’s workplace.
Learn about CMI’s mission, values, and impact. From our Royal Charter to governance, careers, and sustainability commitments, discover who we are and what drives us.
17 December 2015 -
Tackling the gender pay gap will require a root and branch transformation of business culture to address unconscious bias. That’s the view of CMI chief executive Ann Francke.
Research from CMI has found that the pay gap for women over 40 stands at 35% – more than 10 percentage points higher than the average, and that female managers over the age of 40 today face a bigger gender pay gap than a decade ago.
Data from the latest National Management Salary Survey by CMI and XpertHR reveals that women working in full-time management and professional roles earn 22% less on average than men.
This equates to 57 days each year of unpaid work.
The extensive survey of 72,000 UK managers shows that the gender pay gap now stands at £8,524, with women earning on average £30,612 and men earning £39,136.
Speaking to the Women and Equalities Select Committee as an expert witness, Francke said that, despite recent successes in promoting gender equality, more still needs to be done to smash the glass ceiling.
“Anyone who believes hitting the Davies’ targets abolished the glass ceiling is misguided,” she said. “Equality and fair progression means much more than having the same number of men and women on your board. Female managers face what I believe is more of a ‘glass pyramid’ than a ceiling. The walls close in with every step up, and you’re likely to slip down the pecking order when it comes to pay.
“Managers at every level should be accountable on equality, with transparency around hiring, pay and progression the effective solution. They are not doing anyone a favour by offering softer roles for mothers. Capability must not be judged on time served; it is simply a question of whether you’re up to the job. If you are, you must be paid the going rate.
“Anything else is simply discrimination.”
Writing for The Telegraph, Francke said that one common, and false, argument is that women are penalised for having children, but that this just detracts from the core problem of culture.
“The idea [of the motherhood penalty] doesn’t wash at all when we see that this ‘penalty’ affects not just mothers, but all women,” she said. “It's not just those returning from maternity leave who suffer lower pay and fewer promotions.
“The reasons for this are cultural. Simply: there are far too few women in senior positions. It’s not just about the motherhood penalty - we need to look more widely than that. It’s about the culture of success and how we define who is successful: long hours, presenteeism and not fitting work around our modern lifestyles.”
“It’s the system that needs fixing,” she added.
› The persistence of presenteeism and other nuanced nonsense
› A new age of vulnerability: why inclusive leadership matters more than ever
› Ask yourself: "How do I make my employees feel?"
› Finance and the Diversity Dividend
For more information or to request interviews, contact CMI's Press Team on 020 7421 2705 or email press.office@managers.org.uk
› The 5 Greatest Examples of Change Management in Business History
› Four companies that failed spectacularly, and the lessons of their premature demise
› 6 companies that get employee engagement – and what they do right
› 4 Signs That Racism May Be An Issue In Your Workplace
› How to build an Effective Team: focus on just 3 things