Decrease in gender employment gap over last decade

21 May 2019 11:24 AM

A National Statistics Publication for Scotland.

The gender employment gap, which measures the difference between the employment rates for men and women, has decreased from 10.5 percentage points in 2008 to 7.6 percentage points in 2018.

Scotland’s Chief Statistician today published statistics on Regional Employment Patterns in Scotland from the Annual Population Survey (APS). This publication presents annual estimates for a wide range of labour market indicators across local authority areas in Scotland for 2018.

The main findings for 2018 are:

A National Statistics Publication for Scotland.

Trends in Scotland’s labour market are monitored monthly using the quarterly Labour Force Survey (LFS). Monthly briefing for Scotland is available at: http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Labour-Market/LMTrends

As the quarterly LFS has a smaller sample size it cannot be used to monitor trends below Scotland-level or smaller groups including employment by equality characteristics so the APS remains the best source for measuring Regional Employment Patterns.

About the publication

The APS is an annual version of the LFS and the official source of many labour market and skill indicators for Scotland and its local authority areas. The publication provides a summary of data covering key indicators such as employment rates, underemployment (employed people who would be willing to work extra hours), rates of young people not in education, employment or training,  economic inactivity and employment rate gap by gender, ethnicity and disability.

The data in this publication covers the calendar year, January to December 2018.

The figures released today were produced in accordance with professional standards set out in the Code of Practice for Official Statistics.

The full statistical publication can be accessed at: https://www.gov.scot/publications/regional-employment-patterns-scotland-statistics-annual-population-survey-2018/