Skip to main content
Cornell University mobile logo
Apr 19, 2023

Pay Transparency - Impact and Approaches VIRTUAL Working Group

Pay Transparency - Impact and Approaches VIRTUAL Working Group
Wednesday, April 19, 2023 | 10:30am-12:00pm (ET)

Download the Working Group Notes

When & Where

Calendar Icon

Date & Time

Apr 19, 2023
10:30 AM - 12:00 PM

Overview

Pay Transparency - Impact and Approaches VIRTUAL Working Group
Wednesday, April 19, 2023 | 10:30am-12:00pm (ET)

Download the Working Group Notes

Across the globe, policy makers and organizational decision makers are facing the need to think about achieving pay transparency. For example, Denmark and the United Kingdom now require organizations to inform employees of average pay by gender. Canada enabled public access to the salaries of individual faculty in public sector employers. In the United States, several states (California, Colorado) and cities (New York City) began to require organizations to disclose pay range information for job openings. By the end of 2023, close to 25% of US workers will be covered by some forms of pay transparency law. The intent of these laws is to narrow gender and racial pay gaps by giving workers more knowledge and negotiating power. What does the research say here and how are companies dealing with this?

In this working group, Cornell ILR Professor Tae-Youn Park will lead a discussion around pay transparency. Some of the questions that will guide the discussion include:

What are the effects of pay (range) transparency on workers and organizations?
What are the implications of pay transparency law on gender and racial pay gaps?
How are organizations preparing to disclose pay (range) information?

Our virtual working groups are kept small (15-25 participants) to allow for rich discussion and best practice sharing. Given the limited size of each session, we ask that you only register for a session if you will be able to attend for the duration. Prior to the session, attendees should give some thought to the questions included in the description, so they are prepared to share with the group. We also strongly prefer that participants be on camera during the session to allow for more engaging interaction. If for some reason after you sign up for the working group, something comes up last minute (especially while many of us are working from home), it would be great to get even a last-minute e-mail advising us that you cannot attend as we sometimes have a waiting list.