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The gender pay gap – don’t put up with it

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I used to consider myself a bit of an anti-feminist – but before the majority of the profession tear strips off me, let me explain…

There are a number of very strongly opinionated feminists around – on your Facebook feed, in the news and also friends or colleagues – you know the type; those who rant on and on about how a builder whistled at them when out running or how it’s disgusting women can’t walk home alone at night without fearing some sort of assault.

Don’t get me wrong, these are issues that shouldn’t be ignored – but by the time I’ve read the 17th Facebook essay about an objectifying song lyric, it starts to get a bit boring.

Keyboard warriors

In my opinion, these sort of things need to be considered sensibly.

Yes, it’s horrible we live in a world where a female is less safe than a male at night in a city, but what are you going to do about it?

Moaning on Facebook isn’t going to save your life. Swallowing your pride and spending a couple of quid on a taxi, instead of walking, might.

I hated being associated with these hardcore, self-proclaimed feminists, because I think those who aren’t campaigning for equality – but are just man haters – give the rest of the female population a bad name.

The ‘real’ working world

I also used to be naive to things like the gender pay gap, because it didn’t affect me at the time. However, now I’m about to enter the “real” working world, in a predominantly female profession, a recent headline caught my eye.

An article in The Guardian regarding the gender pay gap of university graduates stated: “Women who studied veterinary science experienced the widest gap, earning about half as much as their male counterparts”.

I’m not really sure about the accuracy of the study they refer to, and I’m certainly not aware of such a drastic gap among any of my colleagues, but it did get me thinking.

For new grads, I struggled to see how there could be such a gap, where so many internships and graduate programmes having standardised remuneration packages. However, concerning those who are a few years into their careers, there is the theory women are less likely to ask for pay rises than men.

In this day and age

Jordan claims she hated being associated with hardcore, self-proclaimed feminists who gave the rest of the female population a bad name. IMAGE: dundanim / Fotolia.
Hardcore, self-proclaimed, man-hating feminists who aren’t campaigning for equality give the rest of the female population a bad name, says Jordan. IMAGE: dundanim / Fotolia.

The pay gap is undoubtedly noted across the profession as a whole, with the SPVS Salary Survey in 2014 noting a gap of 10%.

This begs the question, why? How on earth, in the 21st century, despite being a predominately female profession, can there be this difference?

This does, of course, depend on what is being taken into account.

  • Do men progress quicker to partnership roles?
  • Are there more men than women in these senior positions?
  • Is that accounting for the increased number of women in part-time veterinary work compared to men?

We have a private profession where salaries vary so much depending on the employer, the value of an employee to a practice, location, and other benefits or job perks. Therefore, it is hard to speculate without being able to compare colleagues with similar abilities and experience in like-for-like roles.

Unacceptable

All that aside, there certainly is a pay gap in some form within the veterinary profession, and this is unacceptable. It should be unacceptable in any profession.

Maternity leave may well be inconvenient and expensive for employers, but that should not result in discrimination, purely for being born female.

To all the veterinary feminists out there, instead of getting angry at the world, do something for yourself and for the rest of us in the profession – ask for the pay rise you deserve and do not allow yourself to be undervalued purely because nature made you this way.

Don’t put up with financial discrimination. There are enough women in the profession to drive a change, and that we should do.


Comments

5 responses to “The gender pay gap – don’t put up with it”

  1. Unnamed Avatar
    Unnamed

    I genuinely cannot believe that in 2017 the Vet Times just posted an article where the first half just associates feminism with man hating and moaning…..

    1. Marsh Avatar
      Marsh

      Agreed. I also found the latter part to be naive. Once in the ‘real’ working world it will soon become apparent how difficult it is to ask for a pay rise, to define how much you are worth and to truly know how your salary compares to those around you.

  2. Rob Rivera Avatar
    Rob Rivera

    While you are entitled to your ridiculous opinions Jordan, I can’t believe the Vet Times has decided to publish them. Your portrayal of feminism is exactly the kind of view that hinders productive discussion about gender equality in the vet community and beyond.

  3. I honestly cannot believe what I just read. This article associates the feminist movement with “man-hating”, a purely ridiculous notion which only serves to hinder the fight for equal rights for women. When you say “there is nothing we can do about it?” and suggest simply paying for a taxi home rather than exercising the right to free speech and protest – if Emmeline Pankhurst had thought such a thing where would we be today? The fact is that your right to go to study veterinary medicine and your right to vote were fought for by generations of outspoken women and men who would not stand for living in an unequal society, so please forgive those fighting for change if one Facebook rant about an injustice is “boring” to you.

  4. Matt Dickinson Avatar
    Matt Dickinson

    I really think you’ll regret writing this several years from now. Putting aside the alarming comment where your first instinct is to become “bored” when 17 independent people are decrying the same issue on social media, it was this that caught my attention the most:

    “To all the veterinary feminists out there, instead of getting angry at the world, do something for yourself and for the rest of us in the profession – ask for the pay rise you deserve and do not allow yourself to be undervalued purely because nature made you this way.”

    Astounding. Before you can even know you’re undervalued and underpaid, you have to know what everyone else is earning – that’s not always transparent information. And when it is discovered, why should it be down to the undervalued to have to convince their employer of their value, when the only thing actually dictating that undervaluing is their gender? It’s such a twisted premise no one should ever have to argue in the first place.

    How about instead:

    “To all the male bosses out there, instead of profiting from gender inequality and misogyny, stop underpaying women in the first place, and value them regardless of how nature made them”.

    No?

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