The statute speaks again - An assessment of New Zealand's journey towards pay equity: The difficulties and implications of an equitable solution

In 1893 women won the right to vote. Since then, women have been calling for pay equal to that of men. This work evaluates the latest and first successful equal pay claim made under the Equal Pay Act 1972: Service and Food Workers Union Nga Ringa Tota Inc v Terranova Homes and Care Ltd [Terranova]....

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Main Author: Minett, Constance Emily
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/6357
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spelling ftvuwellington:oai:researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz:10063/6357 2023-08-15T12:43:13+02:00 The statute speaks again - An assessment of New Zealand's journey towards pay equity: The difficulties and implications of an equitable solution Minett, Constance Emily 2016 http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/6357 en_NZ eng http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/6357 Equal Pay Act 1972 Equal pay Terranova Service and Food Workers Union Nga Ringa Tota Inc v Terranova Homes and Care Ltd Residential care Text 2016 ftvuwellington 2023-07-25T17:26:55Z In 1893 women won the right to vote. Since then, women have been calling for pay equal to that of men. This work evaluates the latest and first successful equal pay claim made under the Equal Pay Act 1972: Service and Food Workers Union Nga Ringa Tota Inc v Terranova Homes and Care Ltd [Terranova]. Terranova redefined the Act’s requirements for the implementation of equal pay and ended four decades of legislative fossilisation. The scope of the requirement of equal pay for female employees for work exclusively or predominantly performed by them contained in s 3 was interpreted broadly. The potential fiscal implications of Terranova created a situation ripe for political action. The Joint Working Group on Pay Equity Principle was established by the Government and negotiations between the Government and residential care industry began. However, this paper’s conclusion is that effective implementation of equal pay is unlikely. The financial cost of the decision is the most significant barrier. There are significant structural barriers to implementation and deeper issues of systematic gender discrimination remain. Viewed correctly, Terranova does not signify attainment of equal pay; rather it is the start of a journey towards successful implementation. Text Terranova Victoria University of Wellington: ResearchArchive
institution Open Polar
collection Victoria University of Wellington: ResearchArchive
op_collection_id ftvuwellington
language English
topic Equal Pay Act 1972
Equal pay
Terranova
Service and Food Workers Union Nga Ringa Tota Inc v Terranova Homes and Care Ltd
Residential care
spellingShingle Equal Pay Act 1972
Equal pay
Terranova
Service and Food Workers Union Nga Ringa Tota Inc v Terranova Homes and Care Ltd
Residential care
Minett, Constance Emily
The statute speaks again - An assessment of New Zealand's journey towards pay equity: The difficulties and implications of an equitable solution
topic_facet Equal Pay Act 1972
Equal pay
Terranova
Service and Food Workers Union Nga Ringa Tota Inc v Terranova Homes and Care Ltd
Residential care
description In 1893 women won the right to vote. Since then, women have been calling for pay equal to that of men. This work evaluates the latest and first successful equal pay claim made under the Equal Pay Act 1972: Service and Food Workers Union Nga Ringa Tota Inc v Terranova Homes and Care Ltd [Terranova]. Terranova redefined the Act’s requirements for the implementation of equal pay and ended four decades of legislative fossilisation. The scope of the requirement of equal pay for female employees for work exclusively or predominantly performed by them contained in s 3 was interpreted broadly. The potential fiscal implications of Terranova created a situation ripe for political action. The Joint Working Group on Pay Equity Principle was established by the Government and negotiations between the Government and residential care industry began. However, this paper’s conclusion is that effective implementation of equal pay is unlikely. The financial cost of the decision is the most significant barrier. There are significant structural barriers to implementation and deeper issues of systematic gender discrimination remain. Viewed correctly, Terranova does not signify attainment of equal pay; rather it is the start of a journey towards successful implementation.
format Text
author Minett, Constance Emily
author_facet Minett, Constance Emily
author_sort Minett, Constance Emily
title The statute speaks again - An assessment of New Zealand's journey towards pay equity: The difficulties and implications of an equitable solution
title_short The statute speaks again - An assessment of New Zealand's journey towards pay equity: The difficulties and implications of an equitable solution
title_full The statute speaks again - An assessment of New Zealand's journey towards pay equity: The difficulties and implications of an equitable solution
title_fullStr The statute speaks again - An assessment of New Zealand's journey towards pay equity: The difficulties and implications of an equitable solution
title_full_unstemmed The statute speaks again - An assessment of New Zealand's journey towards pay equity: The difficulties and implications of an equitable solution
title_sort statute speaks again - an assessment of new zealand's journey towards pay equity: the difficulties and implications of an equitable solution
publishDate 2016
url http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/6357
genre Terranova
genre_facet Terranova
op_relation http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/6357
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