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11 9% – mind the gap

Episode 3 We know there’s a gender pay gap, we know that the average gap is 11.9% in UK businesses over 250 people – but why are we not seeing more improvement? Why do women lose when it comes to bonuses? And when can a low gender pay gap be a bad thing? This episode’s panel holds nothing back. Find out why LGIM’s Dame Helena Morrisey believes that men having more life choices is key to women’s equal pay; why Liz Benison, the MD of Arriva, likens women self-selecting out the system to skiing in a whiteout; why the ICAEW’s Dr Jane Berney thinks that quotas are not a good thing (while others disagree) and why the CEO of the Fawcett Society, Sam Smethers, cautions against a one-size-fits-all-women approach to diversity in the workplace.

DAME HELENA MORRISEY: Let s spend for Britain

DAME HELENA MORRISEY: Let s spend for Britain Dame Helena Morrissey For The Daily Mail © Provided by Daily Mail MailOnline logo At long last our dormant High Streets, poised for their glorious spring awakening, are ready to burst into new life. From Monday, after months condemned to dreary online clothes shopping, we can once again enjoy browsing racks of summer styles. We can feel the fabrics and appreciate the nuances of colour. We can take an armful of different sizes into a changing room and try on clothes again before we buy, as we did pre-Covid. I’m excited. Who would have thought clothes shopping could become such a treat? But that’s what happens when, for months, we’ve bought everything from websites and taken delivery of items that often don’t live up to expectations.

On your marks, get set, SHOP!

On your marks, get set, SHOP!
dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Exclusive: Brexit hit to London may top £9 5bn a year without EU financial services deal

Exclusive: Brexit hit to London may top £9.5bn a year without EU financial services deal London, at the heart of the UK’s service sector economy, may lose up to £9.5bn in economic output a year from Brexit. And it could be worse if a post-Brexit deal on financial services doesn’t eventuate, research out this morning finds. Financial services, which was carved out from the post-Brexit trade deal between the UK and the EU, may account for more than £2bn in lost GDP per year. Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has today published an analysis of the Government’s Brexit trade deal from a London perspective by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR).

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