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12 Amendments of Marina YANNAKOUDAKIS related to 2011/2285(INI)

Amendment 10 #
Motion for a resolution
Recital E
E. whereas the recast Directive 2006/54/EC has contributed to the improvement of women's situation in the labour market but has not profoundly changed the legislation on closing the gender pay gap; whereas preliminary studies by experts show that little or no change has been made in Member States' legislation and no sanctions have been taken against employers; whereas the complexity of the issue requires not only improvement of the legislation but also; whereas the complexity of the issue requires a Europe-wide strategy to address the gender pay gap, which, in turn, requires strong EU leadership in coordinating policies, promoting good practices and involving various actors;
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 11 #
Motion for a resolution
Recital E a (new)
E a. whereas there is a need for a continued multifaceted approach to further close the gender pay gap, that includes existing Member State led strategies ranging from education, awareness raising and the rewarding of best practice; whereas an EU legislative proposal that increases the administrative burden on SMEs through forced sanctions and internal audits is not required; whereas SMEs are the engine for Europe's economic growth and recovery and to saddle them with extra costs, in a time of harsh economic austerity, is not the sensible or realistic answer for sustainable reductions in gender inequality;
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 13 #
Motion for a resolution
Recital F
F. whereas trends show that salaries are more frequently individually negotiated, resulting in a lack of information and transparency on the individualised pay system which leads to increased pay disparities among employees at similar levels, and can result in widening the gender pay gap; whereas a more decentralised and individualised system of wage setting should therefore be assessed as a rather worrying development, while data protection cannot be taken as a legitimate excuse for not publishing statistical information on salaries;
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 32 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – indent 8
– sanctions,deleted
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 64 #

Annex to the draft motion for a resolution

Recommendation 2, Paragraph 3
2.3. It is therefore essential that regular pay audits, as well as accessible information on their results, are made compulsory within companies (e.g. in companies with at least 100 employees and where at least 10% of employees are women). The same requirement must also apply to information on remuneration in addition to pay. This information should be accessible to employees, trade unions and adequate authorities (e.g. labour inspections, equality bodies)Deleted
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 68 #

Annex to the draft motion for a resolution

Recommendation 2, Paragraph 5
2.5. There should be a requirement on employers to adopt transparency policy in relation to wage composition and structures, including extra pay, bonuses and other advantages forming part of remuneraDeletion.
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 74 #

Annex to the draft motion for a resolution

Recommendation 3, Paragraph 2
3.2. The Commission’s initiative should invite Member States to introduce job classification complying with the principle of equality between women and men, enabling both employers and workers to identify possible pay discrimination based on a biased pay-scale definition. Respecting national laws and traditions concerning industrial relations system remains important. Such elements of work evaluation and classification should also be transparent and be made available to all stakeholders and to labour inspectorates and equality bodies,
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 77 #

Annex to the draft motion for a resolution

Recommendation 4
Equality promotion and monitoring bodies should play a greater role in diminishing GPG. The bodies should be empowered to monitor, report, and, whe and re possible, enforce gender equality legislation more effectively and more independently while they should be adequately fundedrt. Article 20 of Directive 2006/54/EC should be revised so as to enhance the bodies’ mandate by: - supporting and advising victims of pay discrimination; - providing independent surveys concerning the pay gap; - publishing independent reports and making recommendations on any issue relating to pay discrimination; - legal powers to initiate their own investigation; - legal powers to impose sanctions in cases of breaching the principle of equal pay for equal work and/or to bring wage discrimination cases to court; - providing special training for the social partners and for lawyers, judges and ombudsmen based on a toolbox of analytical instruments and targeted measures to be used either when drawing up contracts or when checking whether rules and policies to address the pay gap are being implemented, as well as providing training courses and training materials on nondiscriminatory job evaluation for employers.
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 79 #

Annex to the draft motion for a resolution

Recommendation 5, Paragraph 2
The responsibility of trade unions should be strengthened, while mManagement could alsoan play an important role not only with regard to pay equity, but also in terms of creating a climate to support the equal sharing of care responsibilities and careers advancement for both male and female workers.
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 81 #

Annex to the draft motion for a resolution

Recommendation 6, Paragraph 1, indent 2
- specific policies to make it possible to reconcile work with family and personal life, covering childcare and other care services, flexible work organisation and hours, and affordable, reasonable and sustainable maternity, paternity, parental and family leave,
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 83 #

Annex to the draft motion for a resolution

Recommendation 6, Paragraph 1, indent 3
- concrete affirmative actions (under Article 157(4) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union) to redress the pay gap and gender segregation, to be given effect by the social partners and equal opportunity organisations at various levels, both contractual and sectoral, such as: promoting pay agreements to combat GPG, investigations in relation to equal pay for equal work, setting of qualitative and quantitative targets and benchmarking and supporting the exchange of best practice.
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM
Amendment 86 #

Annex to the draft motion for a resolution

Recommendation 8
8.1. The legislation in this field is for different reasons evidently less effective and, bearing in mind that the whole problem cannot be solved by legislation alone, the Commission and Member States should reinforce the existing legislation with appropriate types of effective, proportionate and dissuasive sanctions. 8.2. It is important that Member States take the necessary measures to ensure that infringement of the principle of equal pay for work of equal value is subject to appropriate sanctions according to the legal provisions in force. 8.3. It is recalled that under Directive 2006/54/EC, Member States are already obliged to provide compensation or reparation (Article 18), as well as penalties (Article 25). However, these provisions are not sufficient to avoid infringement of the equal pay principle. For this reason, it is proposed to conduct a study on the feasibility, effectiveness and impact of launching possible sanctions such as: penalties, which must include the payment of compensation to the victim;- administrative fines (for example in the event of failure of notification or of compulsory communication or unavailability of analysis and evaluation of wage statistics disaggregated by gender (according to Recommendation 2) requested by labour inspectorates or the competent equality bodies; - disqualification from public benefits, subsidies (including EU funding managed by Member States) and public procurement procedures, as already provided for by Directives 2004/17/EC1 and 2004/18/EC2 concerning the procurement procedure.
2012/03/13
Committee: FEMM