How to enforce gender equality? Iceland tests the waters
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| Reykjavik, Iceland
Ingibj枚rg S贸lr煤n G铆slad贸ttir recalls the autumn afternoon when she, along with nearly every woman in Iceland, didn鈥檛 show up. To their jobs, to clean their homes, to care for their babies. It was a protest against low wages and undervalued work. It was 1975.
That is widely seen as the start of Icelandic women鈥檚 formidable march towards gender equality. Ninety percent of Iceland鈥檚 female population joined in, shutting down entire industries. Newspapers shrank that day, and some flights were canceled.
鈥淲omen showed their solidarity, that they are many, that they can be a real change factor,鈥 says Ms. G铆slad贸ttir, who was studying history at university at the time and went on to help found the first women鈥檚 political party in Iceland's modern history. Later she became mayor of Reykjavik, and then Iceland鈥檚 foreign minister.
Yet ironically, despite all the gains women have made since that fall day, the main injustice they were protesting then 鈥 unequal pay for equal work 鈥 has continued to dog this Nordic nation. Now, more than 40 years later, Iceland has taken a radical new approach: punishing companies that pay women less than men.
A new law requiring companies to earn official certification that they offer equal pay went into effect on January 1 for the country鈥檚 largest employers. The first of its kind in the world, the law puts Iceland once again at the forefront of the global women鈥檚 rights movement.
And as the #MeToo movement continues to fight from the bottom up against sexual harassment, gender violence, and the sexism that underpins them, for many here the new law in Iceland underlines the vital role that top-down accountability plays in effecting lasting change.
鈥淚 think our experience shows us how important legal measures are, because gender equality doesn鈥檛 happen of its own accord, it simply doesn鈥檛,鈥 says R贸sa Gu冒r煤n Erlingsd贸ttir, head of the equality unit at Iceland鈥檚 Ministry of Welfare. 鈥淚f politicians decide to wait until the people are ready, or until nobody is going to oppose some legislative changes, nothing will happen.鈥
Still no gender paradise
By many measures, Iceland is already the best place to be a woman. The World Economic Forum has ranked it the most gender equal nation in the world for nine consecutive years for women鈥檚 workforce participation, educational attainment, health, and political empowerment.
The notion of the 鈥渟trong Icelandic woman鈥 dates back centuries, some even say to paganism when goddesses and priestesses commanded religious respect. It persisted culturally as men went to sea and left women with full authority at home.
Launching one of the earliest suffragist movements, Icelandic women won the right to vote in 1915. But the modern women鈥檚 rights movement crystallized on the 1975 march. Five years later Iceland was the first country to directly elect a female president, Vigd铆s Finnbogad贸ttir. Two years after that, women founded the Women鈥檚 List, a feminist political party that paved the way to political empowerment.
Iceland's 2008 banking crisis 鈥 for which women bore practically no responsibility because all the top bankers were men 鈥 marked the start of a renewed push toward political parity, says Brynhildur Hei冒ar-og 脫marsd贸ttir, the executive manager of the Icelandic Women鈥檚 Rights Association.
In 2009, J贸hanna Sigur冒ard贸ttir became Iceland鈥檚 first female prime minister. Feminist-friendly legislation quickly followed. The purchase of sex was criminalized, penalizing prostitutes鈥 clients, not the women themselves. The next year Iceland mandated that women should fill 40 percent of seats on company boards. Strip clubs were banned in 2010. In the 2016 election, women won nearly half the seats in parliament, one of the highest percentages in the world.
This has not made Iceland into a gender paradise. The #MeToo campaign has arrived here with a fury, since sexual harassment and violence against women remain problems as聽stubborn as the pay gap. On October 24th 2016, Icelandic women made international headlines when they organized a variation of the 1975 march, leaving their jobs at exactly 2:38 p.m., after which time they said women worked for free for the rest of the day, compared to men鈥檚 wages.
鈥淲e鈥檝e now been at the top of the World Economic Forum list for the gender gap for nine years running,鈥 says Ms.聽脫marsd贸ttir. 鈥淭hat fact doesn鈥檛 say anything about how good things are in Iceland, but how bad things are in the rest of the world.鈥
Pay the women or pay a fine
Now Iceland is raising the stakes on the pay front. The Equal Pay Standard certification is mandatory for public and private companies with 25 or more employees, an estimated 2,000 entities. The law, which went into effect for the biggest employers in Iceland on January 1st, will be monitored by the government鈥檚 Center for Gender Equality, and if a company fails to comply it will face hefty daily fines.
When the certification was conceived in talks among unions, employers and the government about ten years ago, it was designed as a voluntary measure. And Hannes Sigur冒sson, deputy director general at the Confederation of Icelandic Employers, says it should have stayed that way. The new legal obligation is a drastic and costly step that will not necessarily narrow the pay gap, he says.
Yet Mar铆anna Traustad贸ttir, who specializes in gender issues at the Icelandic Confederation of Labor and who was also involved in the original negotiations, says she was frustrated by how slowly companies adopted the voluntary certification. The average adjusted pay gap between men and women has been stuck at around 7.6 percent for many years.
鈥淲e have been fighting the gender pay gap for decades, we have tried everything,鈥 Ms. Traustad贸ttir says. She says the most important principle behind the new law is to ensure equal pay for work of equal value. 鈥淭he companies and institutions, when they reclassify their whole job鈥ystem, have to ask, are the women working in the canteen serving food, and the driver, doing work of equal value?鈥
脼贸runn Au冒unsd贸ttir, a human resources manager at 脰ssur, a manufacturer of prosthetics, says her company agreed to voluntary certification last year. While the process was time consuming, she says, the firm was found to be in compliance with certification standards.
鈥淲e always have gender glasses on,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e always try for equality in each department; people like it like that, it鈥檚 more fun for everyone.鈥
But Mr. Sigur冒sson says that the law is controversial among his 2,000 business members, even if they do not dare to speak up.
鈥淣o one wants to stand up and say, 鈥業鈥檓 against this measure that has this good intention,鈥欌 he says. "But I know that in their hearts, most business leaders are not in favor of such a measure.鈥
Nonetheless, the law is essential, insists G铆slad贸ttir, who is now the human rights and democracy boss at the Vienna-based Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). Achieving gender parity takes political will, funding and a strong women鈥檚 movement like #MeToo, she says. But legal enforcement is key.
鈥淚 have seen through my work that somehow legislation (on women鈥檚 rights) is not taken as seriously as other legislation, that somehow it is not seen as binding,鈥 she says. 鈥淪o enforcing it is really important."聽