The gender pay gap for full-time workers has fallen below 10% for the first time in 15 years since comparable records began. The

admin2017-04-20  25

问题     The gender pay gap for full-time workers has fallen below 10% for the first time in 15 years since comparable records began. The difference between men’s and women’s median hourly full-time pay fell from 10.5% in 2011 to 9.6% in 2012, according to the annual survey of hours and earnings from the Office for National Statistics(ONS). Women’s average hourly earnings grew by 2% to £12 over the 12 months to April, while men’s earnings grew by 1. 1% to £13. 27, prompting one employment expert to claim "women are steadily chipping away at the glass ceiling."
    The figures show women now earn an average gross full-time salary of £23,100—£5,600 less than their male counterparts and £200 less than the gap of £5,800 seen in 2011. But at the current rate of change women’s full-time pay will not equal men’s until 2040.
    Economists said the narrowing gap can in part be explained by men’s full-time earnings rising slower than women’s. Others suggested a variety of reasons including a cultural shift, more progressive attitudes displayed by bosses, and higher aspirations among women. While women are better paid than men when it comes to part-time work, the ONS said the fact more women work part-time jobs, which tend to have lower rates of pay, means the overall pay gap remains high at 19.7% compared to 20.2% in 2011.
    The Trades Union Congress(TUC) said the lack of high quality part-time work is illustrated by the five highest paid occupations—aircraft pilots; chief executives and directors of advertising and PR; marketing and sales; and telecommunications firms—being dominated by men and having "a negligible number" of part-time positions. In contrast, four of the five worst paid occupations-waiters and waitresses, bar staff, catering assistants and launderers—are dominated by women and have more part-time jobs than full-time ones.
    Frances O’Grady, general secretary designate at the TUC, said: "No healthy modern economy should have an enduring gender pay gap and growing in-work poverty. Unfortunately, common sense solutions such as senior level job shares and flexible working are rarely available in the private sector, and are now under attack in the public sector." Unless we change the way we work we will never eliminate the pay gap or tackle poverty.
    Wages for full-time employees in the U. K. increased by just half the rate of inflation, the study showed, with the median salary rising by 1. 4% to £26,500 in 2012 against inflation of 3% — meaning households are experiencing pay cuts in real terms.
    Xenios Thrasyvoulou, founder of the online freelance marketplace PeoplePerHour, said: "Women are steadily chipping away at the glass ceiling. They may be starting to win the battle of the sexes, but the workforce as a whole is losing the battle with inflation."
    The gap between the highest and lowest paid employees also narrowed, with the hourly earnings (excluding overtime) of full timers in the top 1% of earners falling by 0.2% , compared to a rise of 2.3% for those in the bottom 1 % .
    The number of people earning below the national minimum wage fell during the past 12 months, the ONS said, from 299,000 in 2011 to 287,000 this year. But the ONS admitted the figures were not exact due to the impossibility of identifying people such as apprentices and trainees exempt from the minimum wage rate or only entitled to lower rates.
    Public sector workers earned more than those in the private sector across almost all measures used by the ONS. The median gross weekly pay of full-time employees in the public sector was £565 in 2012, up 1.6% from £556 in 2011, compared to £479 in the private sector, up 1.5% from £472 in 2011.
    But the ONS pointed out that many low-paid occupations such as hairdressers, bar and restaurant staff and junior sales roles do not exist in the public sector.  
What does the author mean by "women are steadily chipping away at the glass ceiling" in Paragraph One?

选项 A、Nowadays full-time women are earning much more money than full-time men.
B、Full-time women are making hard efforts on jobs like walking at the glass ceiling.
C、Women are in dangerous condition, for their earnings are increasing too faster.
D、The gender pay gap is narrowing down, for women’s earnings are increasing gradually.

答案D

解析 语义题。第一段第一句指出,从有可比较的记录算起,15年来英国男女全职员工的工资差异第一次回落到10%以内。该段第三句指出,女性的工资在上涨后达到每小时12英镑,而男性的时薪在上涨后达到每小时13.27英镑。工资差异因女性员工的工资快速上涨而缩小,由此可推测[D]符合文意,故为正确答案。通过该段第三句可知,虽然女性员工工资上涨的比率比男性高,但具体的时薪仍比男性低,[A]不符合文意,故排除;该段第三句中“glass ceiling”(玻璃天花板)引申为“职场中的障碍”,[B]的诠释有误,故排除;由该段第二、三句可知,女性的时薪上涨较快,但不能由此推测出女性陷入危险境地,故排除[C]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/UVzK777K
0

最新回复(0)