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Google The Courts Businesses Government United States Technology

Google Accused of 'Extreme' Gender Pay Discrimination By US Labor Department (theguardian.com) 312

The U.S. Department of Labor is accusing Google of discriminating against its female employees and violating federal employment laws with its salaries for women. "We found systemic compensation disparities against women pretty much across the entire workforce," Janette Wipper, a Department of Labor regional director, testified in court in San Francisco on Friday. The Guardian reports: Google strongly denied the accusations of inequities, claiming it did not have a gender pay gap. The allegations emerged at a hearing in federal court as part of a lawsuit the DoL filed against Google in January, seeking to compel the company to provide salary data and documents to the government. Google is a federal contractor, which means it is required to allow the DoL to inspect and copy records and information about its its compliance with equal opportunity laws. Last year, the department's office of federal contract compliance programs requested job and salary history for Google employees, along with names and contact information, as part of the compliance review. Google, however, repeatedly refused to hand over the data, which was a violation of its contractual obligations with the federal government, according to the DoL's lawsuit. Labor officials detailed the government's discrimination claims against Google at the Friday hearing while making the case for why the company should be forced to comply with the DoL's requests for documents. Wipper said the department found pay disparities in a 2015 snapshot of salaries and said officials needed earlier compensation data to evaluate the root of the problem and needed to be able to confidentially interview employees.
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Google Accused of 'Extreme' Gender Pay Discrimination By US Labor Department

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  • by NotQuiteReal ( 608241 ) on Friday April 07, 2017 @09:07PM (#54196205) Journal
    You can Google average salary info for the type of position you are looking for.

    No need to specify your gender...
    • by drnb ( 2434720 )

      You can Google average salary info for the type of position you are looking for. No need to specify your gender...

      If its average then about half the current employees are below it. And why would an applicant think they are going to start above average, above half the current employees at Google, employees who have had reviews, raises, etc? Ask for average and you price yourself out of a job possibly, regardless of whether you are male or female.

    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      No need to specify your gender...

      > Implying Google hasn't already figured out the gender of the user from their normal data-mining.

      Top kek.

  • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Friday April 07, 2017 @09:14PM (#54196231)
    There must be a mistake because google is all about not being evil. Its right their in their corporate motto. That is how we know we can trust them with everything, the motto and the free stuff.
  • by El Cubano ( 631386 ) on Friday April 07, 2017 @09:35PM (#54196333)

    I get that depending on how you slice and dice the numbers there is anywhere from no pay gap to a full blown social crisis.

    However, what I don't get is that while there is always ample representation of gender, race, and ethnicity, there never seems to be anything discussed about longevity in the workforce. Let me explain. If a man starts working right out of college and works continuously to the age of 50 he will have achieved a certain salary, depending upon his career and other factors. If a woman were to do the same I would expect that they would achieve to a comparable level. The same goes for minorities, both men and women. However, if a woman drops out of the fast lane at age 25 or 27 for 2 years, 5 years, 10 years, 20 years, etc., to raise a family (by that I mean either stops working, goes part time, or chooses a different full-time job specifically for the added flexibility or other family-friendly benefits), then at age 50 she simply will not have the same level of experience.

    Every time that I hear the gender pay gap brought up I have to wonder if the numbers being analyzed account for that situation. Now, some people advocate making it illegal to be stay at home mom. I don't think that is the right solution. Perhaps we need to encourage fathers to spend more time with their families and less time working.

    Either way, boiling it down to a single number: 1) doesn't tell the whole story; and 2) does a disservice to those women who have made a conscious choice to prioritize family above work. My mother did that and I am very happy that she did.

    • by crow ( 16139 )

      Yes, I've wondered the same thing. I've seen several studies that show that that accounts for some of the gap, but by no means all of it. Another related factor is that women often need more flexible work hours to manage families, which impacts pay in many fields. Still, even after accounting for factors like that, women earn less than men.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday April 07, 2017 @10:38PM (#54196571)

      I get that depending on how you slice and dice the numbers there is anywhere from no pay gap to a full blown social crisis.

      However, what I don't get is that while there is always ample representation of gender, race, and ethnicity, there never seems to be anything discussed about longevity in the workforce.

      Uhhh, almost every single study I've read over the last few decades on gender pay gap takes that very thing (longevity) into account.
      If you see an analysis that doesn't in some way take into account longevity, then you know you're looking at a waste of time.

    • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Saturday April 08, 2017 @12:05AM (#54196793) Homepage

      Actually, most studies account for the time off. They basically show both the general all men vs all women numbers and ALSO show equivalent comparisons - years at work, degrees, all roughly equal. Not that hard to do statistically. It comes out to about $5,000, on average.

      What they usually do NOT account for is height. Every inch of MALE height adds about $789 a year (female salary is not as dependent on height - some studies say not at all.) Men are taller than women by about 5-6 inches, which roughly translates to $4330, which is pretty close to the difference between male and female salaries, after accounting for education and experience.

      To add insult to injury, some studies attempt to claim that this is 'justified', as the tall men are supposedly better educated and better socialized - without questioning whether the education and socialization are simply the result of prejudice in their favor when they were children.

  • The real problem (Score:4, Insightful)

    by slashmydots ( 2189826 ) on Friday April 07, 2017 @10:05PM (#54196435)
    You offer a man $70k and he says no, that's not enough. You offer a woman $70k and she agrees. That's not discrimination, that's women being unwise.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I don't think that was stated as eloquently but as someone who used to be in the industry, I was always challenged on starting salary and raises more by men than by women. I'm in NY and I'm not sure if it's the area or the struggle for men to be considered the wage earners but that was my experience. In one case I had to encourage one of my co-workers to ask for more money because they were one of the most talented and the least paid. You don't get raises if you don't ask, and the men seemed to be more head

      • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Friday April 07, 2017 @10:52PM (#54196617)

        You don't get raises if you don't ask, and the men seemed to be more headstrong about asking.

        Its not just asking, its being willing to leave. I worked at a company part time as a software developer while in school working on a computer science degree. It was a great job, flexible hours to accommodate my class schedule, etc. When I graduated I brought up the topic of my salary, expecting at least the industry average of the region. Management said that would be too large a percentage increase and offered me something below the industry average. I pointed out that I have been with them for over two, am fully trained for their specialties, and have received very good reviews. My manager said his hands were tied, too big a percentage increase. I started a job search that night.

        Six weeks later I was back in front of my manager submitting my resignation after accepting a new job elsewhere. He instantly offered to match my current job offer, which was a little above what I had originally asked of him. I asked what happened to the percentage increase problem. He said that in light of the new circumstances that could be waived. I told him I was sorry (I lied) but that I had already accepted the other offer and would not be breaking my word (the truth).

        I was happy, liked the work, liked my coworkers, but I was young, aggressive and not going to take that sort of BS.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        But if you're a woman and you ask, you get a reputation for being bitchy. Both of my sisters have fought this problem repeatedly. One of my sisters and I work in similar fields, an we have compared notes on similar approaches to problems at our respective jobs, and it amazes me just how little room she has to negotiate on ANY topic before e-mails from co-workers get pretty negative about her attitude. When negotiating for salary up front the wiggle room is even smaller because the chances go up of not getti
        • because the chances go up of not getting the job at all.

          Isn't this the case for everyone, though?

          • Isn't this the case for everyone, though?

            Statistics from many studies do not bear that out. Guys tend to be seen as assertive (positive quality) and engaging (positive quality) for the same actions.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          More guys should try switching names with a female co-worker for a week.

          https://medium.com/@nickyknack... [medium.com]

        • you get a reputation for being bitchy

          Heaven forbid... its no wonder a person doesnt ask for reasonable compensation when the threat is getting "a reputation" for being "bitchy" when you do...

          Here in the real world, everyone has a fucking reputation. Deal with it. Grow the fuck up.

          • Let me rephrase -- you get a reputation for being bitchy, then you get denied promotions, cut out of projects, and become the first one management thinks of if layoffs are necessary.
            • Funny, 90% of my former (male) bosses were selfish assholes, hated by most employees, but that never stopped them reaching the top.

              • Were those assholes liked by their superiors? That's what gets promotions. The data from numerous researchers finds that the people with decision making power in corporations (both male and female) TEND to see an up-and-coming assertive (asshole) male as an asset and an up-and-coming assertive (asshole) female as a detriment. At any given company, there may not be these limits, so your personal experience may vary, but across the industry, the bias shows up pretty significantly in data, even when correcting
      • You don't get raises if you don't ask

        Most companies have annual raises and the amount is set by your perceived value to the company.
        Argue about the amount of your raise just once, and management takes note of the fact and offers you less the next time, so that you'll be satisfied with the amount you argue up to.

        There are companies that encourage aggressive behaviour (and if you're a nice guy they're miserable places to work) and such places will follow your model, but those places are not in the majority.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      Problem: If a woman challenges on salary then she doesn't get the job because evaluators decide she's too combative. The bias of too many interviewers cuts off the woman's ability to negotiate higher pay. The perception of a good man as willing to fight for his position and of a good woman as being accommodating to her environment means that a very wise woman who wants a job may very well decide she cannot afford to argue. And that is discrimination.
    • hardly "unwise" since she is increasing her chances of getting the job
  • Sure, you can go for women's pay, but you cant go for age discrimination since we're not over the age of 40, despite supposed equal protection under the law.

    Fucking hypocrites.

    • If you feel that age discrimination laws are outdated, get organized, find others that feel the same way and get lawmakers to update the outdated law. If your political activism is limited to “how dare they work on solving problem X, while they ignore solving problem Y”, it might look like you are fine with problem X and just using Y as an excuse.
  • Whether Google really is violating the law, the prosecution itself is a convenient means of suppressing opposition. Google was [washingtontimes.com] "with her" [breitbart.com] all the way [democracynow.org]. Could this be a payback from the Trump's Administration?

    Or, the other way around, has the previous Administration sat on it because Google was all for the Democratics [opensecrets.org]? Worse, maybe, Google's unprecedented cooperation [freebeacon.com] was due to the subtle blackmail in the first place?

    Whatever the answers to these questions, I'd rather they not be asked at all — there should be no thoughtcrimes for the government to prosecute. At all.

    Discrimination may be stupid and unethical, but it should not be illegal.

  • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • It makes me happy too, but for a very different reason than yours. It means that these people actually stand for their principles and are willing to criticize each other when they violate them. Where I live we have feminists defending rapists when they are their best friends and parliament members talking against violating the Shabbat while they drive their own car in it. I don't like SJWs much as well, but I'd rather have them over corruption and hypocracy.

  • by Chelloveck ( 14643 ) on Saturday April 08, 2017 @12:05PM (#54198501)

    Wage disparity would end almost overnight if we got rid of this ridiculous notion that wages should be a secret. If you knew what everyone else was being paid you'd immediately know if you were getting the short end of the stick. It would be obvious if there was any systemic bias in wages.

    Really, why wouldn't you want your peers to know what you make? The only reasons I can only think of are, "I might be getting paid too little and they'd all think less of me if they knew", or "I might be getting paid too much and they'd take it away from me to make it fair".

    Keeping it a secret only benefits unscrupulous employers. The ones who will give you a low starting offer and low raises on the grounds that you'll never really know how much better you could be doing if you went elsewhere.

    Adam Ruins Everything - Why You Should Tell Coworkers Your Salary [youtube.com]

Don't tell me how hard you work. Tell me how much you get done. -- James J. Ling

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