Serena Williams makes passionate call for equal pay for black women | Sport
Serena Williams, one of the highest paid and most successful athletes in the world, has issued a stirring call for black women to demand equal pay and spoken about the racism she has faced âon and off the tennis courtâ.
In a personal essay published by Fortune to coincide with Black Womenâs Equal Pay Day, the tennis superstar said the gender pay gap âhits women of colour the hardestâ, as they suffer from both gender and racial financial disparity. For every dollar earned by men in the US, Williams said, black women earn 63 cents, and 17% less than white women.
Her comments come as pay gaps are examined in a range of industries after the BBC was engulfed in scandal when it published a list of its top earners in July.
Williams, a 23-times grand slam winner, wrote that black women have to work eight months longer to earn the same âas their male counterparts do in one yearâ, and drew on her own experiences to highlight the unfair treatment of black women in the workplace. âIâve been disrespected by my male colleagues and â" in the most painful times â" Iâve been the subject of racist remarks on and off the tennis court,â she wrote.
Williams has repeatedly been the target of sexist and racist remarks by men in tennis. In 2016 the chief executive of the Indian Wells tennis tournament, Raymond Moore, said womenâs tennis was riding on the coat-tails of the menâs tour and that female players should âthank godâ for Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. In April the Romanian team captain, Ilie Nastase, made an apparently racist comment about Williamsâs unborn baby and was heard calling her and Johanna Konta âfucking bitchesâ.
Most recently, former champion John McEnroe said Williams would âbe, like, 700 in the worldâ if she played on the menâs tour. âLuckily I am blessed with an inner drive and a support system of family and friends that encourage me to move forward. But these injustices still hurt,â Williams wrote.
Noting that she is âin the rare position to be financially successful beyond my imaginationâ, Williams said that, if she had not been lucky enough to pick up a tennis racquet and break through, she would be like the other 24 million black women facing wage disparities in the US.
âThe cycles of poverty, discrimination and sexism are much, much harder to break than the record for Grand Slam titles,â she wrote. âFor every black woman that rises through the ranks to a position of power, there are too many others who are still struggling.â
She said that changing the status quo would take courage to push the issue into the spotlight and force employers to compensate female employees equally: âWe deserve equal pay for our mothers, our wives, our daughters, our nieces, friends, and colleagues â" but mostly for ourselves.
âBlack women: be fearless. Speak out for equal pay. Every time you do, youâre making it a little easier for a woman behind you. Letâs get back those 37 cents.â
Black Womenâs Equal Pay Day, on 31 July, marked how long into 2017 an African American woman would have to work to be paid the same wages as her white male counterpart last year.
âDespite the large gender disadvantage faced by all women, black women were near parity with white women in 1979,â the Economic Policy Institute said. âHowever in 2016, white womenâs wages grew to 76% of white menâs, compared to 67% for black women relative to white men â" a racial difference of nine percentage points. The trend is going the wrong way â" progress is slowing for black women.â
In the UK, research by the Fawcett Society in March revealed a similar story, that many minority ethnic women were âleft behindâ by progress on the pay gap.
Black African women in the UK have seen virtually no progress since the 1990s in closing the gender pay gap with white British men, with a full-time pay gap of 21.4% in the 1990s and 19.6% today.
âBlack African women have been largely left behind, and in terms of closing the pay gap, Pakistani and Bangladeshi women are today only where white British women were in the 1990s,â Sam Smethers, the charityâs chief executive, said.
The low number of staff from ethnic minorities on the BBCâs list of its best-paid talent has also provoked an angry response inside the corporation, after no black or ethnic minority staff featured among those earning the top 24 salaries.
Williams has been a consistent advocate of equal pay. Earlier this month, when asked about what she would want for her child, she said: âIf my daughter were to play in a sport and she was able to have equal prize money, or equal pay, or equal rights, I feel like that would be a success. And if not, I would really want her to speak up for it. Any daughter of mine will have a voice.â
She also praised Andy Murray after he corrected a journalist who said Sam Querrey was âthe first US player to reach a major semi-final since 2009â.
Williams has joined the board of Silicon Valley firm SurveyMonkey to help tech companies diversify their workforces.
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