top of page
Writer's pictureGBS

Different Rates of Pay for the Same Job Are Sometimes Okay

With the Equal Pay Provision that was introduced in 2014, there have been many cases lodged at the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation, and Arbitration alleging unfair discrimination based on the fact that this provision was not adhered to. The Case of African Meat Industry & Allied Trade Union/Premier FMCG (Pty) Ltd – (2019) 28 CCMA 6.12.2 shows that differences in pay for the same job do not always violate the Equal Pay Provision. The employees claimed that the employer was paying employees the same grade at unequal hourly rates and that this amounted to unfair discrimination.


The employer contended that the differences in wage rates were based on different lengths of service and other considerations such as former Temporary Employment Services (TES) employees being employed.


The CCMA Commissioner noted that the employees had claimed discrimination on an arbitrary ground. The onus, accordingly, rested on them to prove that the differences in the hourly rate of pay, which was relied on, were irrational and unfair.


The arbitrator reasoned that employees must prove that the grounds on which they rely are linked to the prohibited grounds in the sense that the grounds have the potential to impair their dignity. The wage differentials in each group were based on seniority although other factors included the insourcing of former TES employees. The employees had merely relied on the difference in wage rates without citing the ground on which they relied. The employees’ unhappiness with their rates of pay was a matter of mutual interest. The Commissioner found that the difference in wage rates was neither irrational nor unfair. It did not amount to discrimination.


The case was dismissed.


Contact Global Business Solutions

Natalie Singer, natalie@globalbusiness.co.za, is our equal pay expert and is on hand to handle any equal pay queries you may have.


Cheerful shopkeeper with short blonde hair and red glasses, wearing a beige apron, stands confidently with arms crossed in a well-stocked convenience store, symbolizing small business success.


Commenti


bottom of page