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This legislation would amend New York State’s Civil Service
Law, expanding the equal pay for equal work law to include equal pay
for different work.
The Business Council of New York State opposes this bill because:
- Equal pay is already current law - For 40 years,
equal pay for equal work has been and continues to be the law for
both public and private employers. This issue is covered by the Equal
Pay Act of 1963 and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Sections 115
and 118 of the New York State Civil Service law. These laws have
created a vigorous standard and require employers to pay male and
female, minority and non-minority employees the same wages if they
are doing work “substantially
equal” in skill, effort, responsibility and working conditions.
These existing laws already prohibit any wage differentials based
on the sex or race of the employee and therefore make it unnecessary
to enact a new state public sector comparable worth law.
- Market
based wages are rejected - The theory of comparable worth
rejects market involvement in the determination of pay and substitutes
a so-called objective independent assessment of the “value” of
the work. Vast numbers of employers use market based salary and wage
surveys, which include geographic differentials, industry, revenue
and organization size, to price their jobs.
- Breaking down boundaries - Ironically,
comparable worth would strengthen the boundaries of traditional female
and male jobs. Using the comparable worth doctrine, fewer women would
be willing to take traditionally higher paying jobs because the incentive
of higher pay would disappear.
- Supply and Demand - In a free market,
the value of a job is determined by the supply and demand of workers
in a given profession. Pay levels are the result of supply and
demand. The higher the demand for the skill or service, the higher
the pay and, likewise, the lower the demand, the lower the pay. All
workers have the opportunity to strive for high demand jobs.
Comparable worth would replace the equality of opportunity with
the equality of results, using legislation and government regulation.
For these reasons, The Business Council opposes this legislation and
respectfully urges that it not be enacted by the Assembly.
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