Acknowledgements endorsements Background methodology executive Summary 11 Recommendations 22 Article — general obligations 38



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Women with Disability


  1. Key issues include low workforce participation, lower remuneration and poorer quality jobs. Data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics show that working-age women with disability who are in the labour force are half as likely to find full-time employment (20 percent) as men with disability (42 percent); twice as likely to be in part-time employment (24 percent) as men with disability (12 percent); and regardless of full-time or part-time status, are likely to be in lower paid jobs than men with disability.581 A 2004 Senate Inquiry into Poverty and Financial Hardship concluded that women with disability are also affected by the lower wages paid to women relative to men and are more likely to be in casual jobs with little job security.582

  2. While the National Disability Strategy recognises that women with disability “face poorer economic outcomes than men with disability”, there are no gender-specific measures identified in the ‘Areas for future action’.

  3. Australia has announced a raft of measures in an attempt to address pay inequities in remuneration, including changes introduced to the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) to include the right to equal pay for work of equal or comparable value.583 Whilst these and other measures are a welcome move for women in general, there is no specific reference to women with disability in the Australia’s planned measures announced in an attempt to address the pay gap.



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