Fact Service April 2014

Issue 16

Asda women launch equal pay claim

More than 400 female employees at Asda have launched legal action against the supermarket over equal pay.

The cases are aimed at determining if the mainly female-staffed retail jobs are of equal value to higher-paid jobs in Asda’s male-dominated distribution centres.

If the case is successful, the employees who have alleged they have been underpaid could be entitled to six years’ back pay for the difference in earnings.

The cases are possible because Asda owns and operates its own distribution warehouses.

Other supermarkets that also own their own distribution centres, such as John Lewis Partnership, Marks and Spencer, Morrisons, Sainsbury’s and Tesco, could also face legal action, said Michael Newman from the employment team at law firm Leigh Day, which is representing the Asda employees.

He said: “In the supermarkets, check-out staff and shelf-stackers are mostly women. The people in the warehouses are pretty much all men. And the group that is mostly men gets paid more.

“We are very confident that the jobs are pretty much the same. In the warehouses, they take stuff off the shelves, put it on a pallet and stick it on a lorry. In the supermarket, they do the reverse: take the pallets off the lorry, unstack them and put stuff on the shelves.”

www.employeebenefits.co.uk/compliance/asda-staff-launch-equal-pay-case/104574.article