Arjuna Capital’s 2024 Racial and Gender Scorecard List: A Catalyst for Pay Equity
Arjuna Capital released its seventh annual Racial and Gender Pay Scorecard in March and the results highlighted where companies stand in their pay transparency efforts. The scorecard, which grades organizations on pay gap disclosures, underscores the need for many employers to work toward authentic pay equity.
Arjuna continues to expand the list of companies they evaluate. This year the list included the 100 largest U.S. companies by market capitalization as well as 28 engaged by investors. This nearly doubled the number of companies covered in the 2023 scorecard, which no doubt surprised many of those included.
Organizations are under heightened scrutiny to address disparities in pay and opportunities among employees. And Arjuna Capital, a sustainable investment firm, has turned up the heat on organizations in recent years by publicly disclosing data on gender and racial pay disparities. The goal of the project is to empower investors and stakeholders to make more informed decisions about where to allocate their resources.
Proactive Steps for Employers
Arjuna’s grade card is largely based on pay gap disclosures, with some impact from results such as:
In other words, even if your organization is currently working toward achieving pay equity and improving workplace equity, you will still score low if you haven’t publicly shared the results.
Just two of the 128 companies on the list received an “A+” grade, while 13 received an “A” grade. Target and Starbucks both earned perfect scores because of their “comprehensive disclosures of median and adjusted pay gaps” and “annual commitment to conduct and publish pay equity analyses.”
If you’re one of the 60+ employers that received a “D” or “F” grade, there are proactive solutions you can take to improve your standing and better prepare for next year.
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Leverage Pay Equity Software Tools
If you are concerned with your standing in the pay equity landscape, it behooves you to leverage pay equity software to advance efforts. Landing an unfavorable grade from Arjuna Capital’s Racial and Gender Scorecard should embolden you to level up your workplace equity efforts.
A common pitfall for employers in their pay equity journey is relying on a once-a-year statistical analysis, typically during or after the annual salary planning cycle. While this is a good time to conduct such an analysis, we recommend monitoring pay equity year-round.
Various factors such as turnover, labor market dynamics, promotions, pay increases, etc. directly influence your organization’s pay equity. Evaluating it once a year is like trimming weeds — it temporarily solves the problem, but it doesn’t get to the root cause. Monitoring pay equity on an ongoing basis used to be an arduous task, but pay equity software simplifies this process.
Use Trusaic’s pay equity and opportunity equity solutions to understand, explain and resolve pay disparities:
Further, we offer a global pay data reporting solution to complete required reporting by compliance deadlines.
With Trusaic, you can move forward in your workplace equity journey with confidence and ensure you are on the path to receiving a coveted “A+.”