Monday, January 20 2025

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Gender Pay Gap Pushes Cost of Living

The rising cost of living is creating far more financial stress for female employees than their male counterparts, new research from Mintago has found.

The financial wellbeing platform surveyed a nationally representative sample of 1,333 UK adults in full- or part-time work. It found that almost one in two (48 per cent) female employees are either ‘very’ or ‘somewhat’ stressed, while less than a third (31 per cent) of male employees said the same.

When asked about the factors that were contributing to their stress levels, 69 per cent of female employees cited the rising cost of living is their top concern. Only 52 per cent of male employees selected this. General money or financial worries were the second most common source of stress for both men (48 per cent) and women (65 per cent), with again female employees far more likely to have this playing on their minds.

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Further down the list of stress factors, however, the survey found that men (24 per cent) were more stressed about their job security than women (19 per cent).

Rachele Carraro, financial wellbeing expert at Mintago, said: “These startling figures demonstrate just how vital it is that employers engage with their employees with regard to their finances and wellbeing, particularly those who face societal disadvantages.

“Without taking the time to create an open dialogue with employees and ensure robust financial wellbeing support is in place, injustices like gender inequality risk slipping through the cracks. The longer this additional financial burden upon women continues without recourse, the more profound the issue will become.

Chieu Cao, CEO of Mintago, added: “The gender pay gap is common knowledge, and our new research underlines the impact this has on people’s wellbeing, with women far more stressed than men during the cost-of-living crisis. Inflation remains sky-high, so money worries will not dissipate any time soon.

“Employers cannot underestimate the impact of money worries on their employees’ wellbeing. So, they should take action to ensure their entire workforce are getting the support they need. This means giving staff the tools – such as financial education, interactive pension dashboards or access to financial advisers – they need to navigate what continues to be an extremely challenging economic climate.”

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Newsdesk
Newsdesk
The Global Recruiter Newsdesk bringing you balanced journalism, accuracy, news and features for all involved in the business of recruitment from around the world

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