It is unacceptable that in 2020 women and girls continue to pay more than men for basic and essential products.
According to a report published in 2012 by Development Economics on behalf of Aviva insurance, women on average pay £200 more annually than men for the same every-day consumer goods and services – £200 women would not have had to pay in the last year had the Conservatives adopted my Bill.
This injustice is only made worse by the gender pay gap, which sees 8 out of 10 companies still paying more to their male employees. Women are being hit by a double whammy: they’re earning less and paying more, and they deserve better.
🤷♀️Women on average pay £200 more annually than men for the same every-day consumer goods and services.
🙋♀️After their failure to do so last year, @cajardineMP is calling upon the Government ahead of #IWD2020 to end the discriminatory Pink Tax by supporting her Bill this week. pic.twitter.com/ftO2HZavEz— Liberal Democrats (@LibDems) March 5, 2020
After their failure to do so last year, I once again call upon the Government to mark International Women’s Day by ending the discriminatory Pink Tax and supporting my Bill this week:
Gender-based Pricing (Prohibition) Bill
To prohibit the differential pricing of products and services that are substantially similar other than being intended for, or marketed to, a particular gender; and for connected purposes.
So far, the co-sponsors are:
Hannah Bardell (SNP)
Jess Philips (Labour)
Caroline Nokes (Conservative)
Maria Miller (Conservative)
Daisy Cooper (Liberal Democrat)
Wendy Chamberlain (Liberal Democrat)
Layla Moran (Liberal Democrat)
Sarah Olney (Liberal Democrat)
Wera Hobhouse (Liberal Democrat)
Munira Wilson (Liberal Democrat)
This unfair price gap will have a significant financial impact on a woman over the course of her life. It’s time to get rid of the Pink Tax.