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Work & Family » Pay Equity » A history of pay equity A history of pay equityMilestones in pay equityThe following timeline charts the major Australian pay equity milestones since federation:
90 years towards pay equityVariously called `pay equity', `comparable worth' or `equal pay for work of equal value', the basic concept behind pay equity is that men and women should be paid equally for work that is of either equal or comparable value. Thus, women who perform work of equal skill and responsibility to men under the same or comparable conditions, determined according to an objective measure should be paid equally. The focus of pay equity in Australia has been generally concentrated at the national level. Pay equity issues have largely been addressed by wage fixing tribunals within the industrial relations system, rather than by direct legislation. In NSW, changes in women's wages have been tightly bound up with developments in the Federal industrial relations system. There has been a significant shift in approach to pay equity issues this century. The Australian Conciliation and Arbitration Commission has moved from its rejection in 1912 of the argument that the basic wage for men and women be the same, to the introduction of the principle of equal pay for equal work in the first equal pay case in 1969. Subsequent equal pay cases in the 1970's and 1980's have continued to develop equal pay principles. Further developments have occurred through the National Wage Cases of the late 1980's and early 1990's. These cases established appropriate relativities within awards, endorsed a Minimum Rates Adjustment Principle (which allowed the comparison of rates across awards) and introduced a system of arbitrated safety net wage adjustments to protect low paid workers. These federal decisions, which have flowed on to NSW, have resulted in benefits for women's pay and the recognition of their skills. Despite Australia's somewhat checkered pay equity history, its centralised wage fixing system since the early 1970s has produced better outcomes for women than most other countries around the world. The female/male wage differential in Australia is among the smallest of the industrialised economies. While most gains in equal pay for Australian women have occurred through wage fixing, there have recently been attempts to address pay equity issues through legislation. The Industrial Relations Act 1996 (NSW) and the recently enacted Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) both have provisions which are aimed at removing pay inequities, although the mechanisms under these Acts for doing so differ significantly. ReferencesEPAC, Income Dispersion in Australia: Recent Trends and Research, 1995. NSW Pay Equity Taskforce, A Woman's Worth: Pay Equity and the Undervaluation of Women's Skills, Issues Paper, August 1996. Further informationWomen's Equity Bureau |