The Workplace Gender Equality Agency is an Australian Governmentstatutory agency responsible for promoting and improving gender equality in Australian workplaces. The agency was created by the Workplace Gender Equality Act 2012 and provides employers with advice, practical tools and education to help them improve gender equality. The Workplace Gender Equality Act 2012 was enacted by an amendment to the Equal Opportunity for Women in the Workplace Act 1999, that changed its name to the Workplace Gender Equality Act and correspondingly changed the name of the Equality Opportunity for Women in the Workplace Agency to the Workplace Gender Equality Agency. The Workplace Gender Equality Agency is part of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.
Activities
Non-public sector employers with 100 or more staff are required to report to the agency annually, between 1 April-31 May, against six gender equality indicators:
gender composition of the workforce
gender composition of governing bodies of relevant employers
availability and utility of employment terms, conditions and practices relating to flexible working arrangements for employees and to working arrangements supporting employees with family or caring responsibilities
any other matters specified by the Minister: sex-based harassment and discrimination
The Agency uses the data to develop confidential and customised Competitor Analysis Benchmark Reports for employers, that allow them to compare their performance to their peers. The WGEA dataset is unique, covering 4 million employees or around 40% of the Australian workforce, providing a detailed insight into the state of gender equality in Australian workplaces, and at an industry and sector level. The WGEA's data is publicly available and searchable at http://data.wgea.gov.au
Key statistics
The following statistics were sourced from WGEA's 2017-18 dataset:https://www.wgea.gov.au/data/wgea-research/australias-gender-equality-scorecard
Australia's gender pay gap is 21.3% based on full-time total remuneration, and 16.2% based on full-time base remuneration.
17.1% of CEOs are women
30.5% of Key Management Personnel positions held by women
39.1% of managers are women
6.4% of management positions are part-time
70.7% of employers have a flexible working policy or strategy
74.3% have an overall gender equality strategy and/or policy