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- Billionaire investor Paul Tudor Jones cofounded the nonprofit Just Capital in 2013 to measure what Americans want from corporations, and which of these companies are contributing to a "more just" society.
- Just Capital found that since 2016, 126 of America's largest public companies undertook pay equity analyses, but only 65 made those results public.
- Just Capital believes that the gender pay gap in America can be closed faster when major companies are transparent about how they pay
employees . - This article is part of Business Insider's ongoing series on Better Capitalism.
Last week, two NASA astronauts suited up and left the International Space Station for a spacewalk. While this was slated to be a historic first spacewalk taken by two women - Anne McClain and Christina Koch - there apparently weren't two space suits designed to fit each of them. Male astronaut Nick Hague ended up taking McClain's place at the last minute.
This may have been one small step for man, but was it a step back for womankind?
The women of the corporate workforce, too, find themselves persistently held back. In the US today, men earn an estimated 21.4% higher base pay than women on average, while in Europe, countries like the UK have implemented new legislation to put pressure on companies to conduct pay equity analyses and disclose their findings. The results have not been heartening.
Transparency is the lynchpin to addressing the pay gap, and without the rigor and pressure of reporting requirements, there's little hope for closing the gender pay gap in the United States.
Just Capital tracks how the largest publicly traded US companies perform on the issues that matter most to the American public, based on an annual survey effort. Consistently since 2015, Americans have agreed that pay equity is a key measure of Just business behavior. In the 2018 rankings, we evaluated the companies we rank based on whether they conducted a pay equity analysis, and whether the results were disclosed.
Just Capital
Of the 890 companies analyzed, 126 evaluated their gender pay gap, and only 65 disclosed the results - that's just 7%. A recent study from Glassdoor suggests that the pay gap has been narrowing, but that it may take another 50 years before women can expect to be paid the same as their male counterparts.
We've spoken out in the past about the critical importance of transparency around this issue, and while disclosure alone cannot close the pay gap, it is an essential first step to better understanding the landscape of pay equity in the US, and tackling the inequality that many women face in the workplace.
Below is a list of the 65 companies that have disclosed the results of pay equity analyses in 2016 or later. This year, we ask that corporate leaders follow the lead of the companies below, committing to a more transparent and just marketplace for both men and women.
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Alison Omens is the managing director of programs and strategic engagement at Just Capital, an independent, nonprofit organization that aligns business practices with the priorities of the American people to ensure capitalism works for all. Their research, rankings, indexes, and data-driven tools help people make more informed decisions about where to invest, work, and buy to direct capital toward companies advancing a more just future. For additional information, visit here.