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UK Financial Sector Needs to Tackle 'Alpha Male Culture' – Treasury Committee

© REUTERS / Russell BoyceTraders from BGC, a global brokerage company in London's Canary Wharf financial centre react as European stock markets open early June 24, 2016 after Britain voted to leave the European Union in the EU BREXIT referendum.
Traders from BGC, a global brokerage company in London's Canary Wharf financial centre react as European stock markets open early June 24, 2016 after Britain voted to leave the European Union in the EU BREXIT referendum. - Sputnik International
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The existence of an apparent gender pay gap in the UK has once again entered the limelight, with a committee of MPs making recommendations on how to tackle the issue in the financial sector.

The Treasury Committee said London’s financial district needs to tackle its “alpha male culture” and its “unconscious” bias to improve gender diversity and reduce the gender pay gap, the Independent newspaper reported today.

The cluster of MPs on the committee pinpointed long and rigid working hours as key inhibitors to the entry of more women into the financial services sector, and called for these barriers to be removed.

READ MORE: British Female MPs Start #PayMeToo Campaign Amid Gender Pay Gaps

Nicky Morgan, the committee’s chairwoman, said “The reporting of gender pay gaps at financial services firms confirms that a large gap exists between men and women working in finance, in part due to significantly more men than women in higher-earning and more senior positions.

“The benefits of gender diversity are highlighted in the report, including better financial performance, reduced groupthink and more open discussions.”

Business people - Sputnik International
Britain's Trade Union Congress Releases Report on Gender Pay Gap
Earlier this year, as part of a compulsory pay transparency initiative, numerous firms revealed their gender pay gap figures for the first. The data showed men and women employed in the financial sector to have some of the greatest pay disparities in Britain.

According to the data, HSBC pays its female employees also 60 percent less its male workers, and the average gender pay gap in banks and building societies stands at 35 percent.

It should be noted that most gender pay gap studies fail to take into account different working hours and career choices, and therefore, pay gap statistics typically don’t serve as accurate comparisons of how much male and female colleagues earn for the same amount of work, at the same level.

READ MORE: Veteran BBC Presenter Humphrys in Hot Water Over Gender Pay Gap Joke

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