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EU / Presidency: Civil society praises Portugal’s focus on the equality agenda

Lusa, 24 January 2021

This article was originally published on Lusa.

Civil society organisations praise the focus of the Portuguese presidency of the Council of the European Union on the equality agenda, but expect concrete advances in the guidelines for quotas in company administrations and wage transparency.

In an interview with Lusa, Ana Sofia Fernandes, vice president of the European Women’s Lobby, a lobby group with the European institutions, recalls that this European Commission, when it took office, committed itself to a directive on wage transparency in the first hundred days of office .

“The Commission is late in implementing this proposal. Right now, there is a lot of pressure to move forward ”, she says, stressing that this directive “ is a first step to end wage inequality ”.

In addition, it “makes perfect sense” in this pandemic context. “Women have precarious work, unpaid work. Work in the area of ​​care (...), which is keeping societies functioning (...), is poorly paid, is not economically valued, has an extraordinary economic value that is not accounted for in public accounts ", she denounces.

“This directive is essential for the future of Europe and for the future of women”, she adds.

The Lobby insists on "binding measures" and expects the Commission to present a proposal at the meeting of the High Level Group on Gender Mainstreaming, scheduled for Monday and Tuesday, under the Portuguese Presidency of the EU Council.

For the Lobby, it is important to establish a “European definition of what is meant by equal pay for work of equal value”, to introduce mandatory salary audits and positive action measures that guarantee non-discrimination in recruitment practices and to ensure that equal pay is a criterion in public procurement.

"It is not acceptable for public money to be used to purchase services or products from companies that do not have properly monitored equal pay policies", stresses Ana Sofia Fernandes.

In addition, she notes, it is crucial that EU governance should include monitoring of equal pay in all Member States and imposing measures when countries fail to comply with obligations.

The researcher and vice-president of the Economic and Social Council, Sara Falcão Casaca, adds, in written statements to Lusa, the importance of “more transparent information on remunerations”, disaggregated by sex, and “the adoption of methodologies for assessing functions and classification of professions without gender bias ”.

Regarding the proposal for a directive that imposes gender quotas on company administrations, “blocked since 2012”, Ana Sofia Fernandes says that only the fact that Portugal put the issue on the agenda “is a significant step”.

The president of the Portuguese Platform for Women’s Rights also points out the "progress" in the countries that have already introduced this measure, but she knows that it is a "difficult" debate.

“Studies have shown that the countries that have made the most progress (…) were those where legislation exists (aka ’quotas’) determining minimum thresholds for the representation of each sex. Portugal is an example of this ”, corroborates Sara Falcão Casaca, a professor at ISEG.

“There is resistance, but there is less and less of it”, she points out, considering that “it is time to reach a definitive consensus on this matter” and assuring that CES has “a great interest in seeking to contribute and stimulate a constructive debate on these themes ”.

In November 2020, the most recent data, the EU had only 30% women on the boards of the largest listed companies.

Regarding the impact of Covid-19 on women, the Lobby praises the Portuguese presidency for having requested a “research note” from the European Institute for Gender Equality.

“It is a significant political signal that women’s rights, in this context, are being a priority for the Portuguese presidency”, acknowledges Ana Sofia Fernandes, warning, however, that it is important that these data are translated into objectives and are not only in European recovery measures, but also in national plans.

Ana Sofia Fernandes also stresses that Portugal has brought “social Europe to the center of the agenda”, operating “a paradigm shift”.

Pointing out that violence against women “is another pandemic”, which “has not disappeared and has become much more evident” in the current context, the Lobby calls on Portugal to do its best to move towards an “integrated directive to combat violence against women and girls in all their forms ”.

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