Sponsored content: Rachael Wornes, marketing manager at Arag UK, discusses the gender insurance gap ahead of International Women’s Day

As we approach International Women’s Day (IWD) (8 March 2025), there will inevitably be some focus on gaps – the difference between the experiences and outcomes for men and women in the workplace, their financial wellbeing and many other aspects of life.

Rachael Wornes Arag

Rachael Wornes

The gender pay gap, which expresses the difference between the average hourly earnings of men and women, is probably the most discussed and best understood, but various organisations have identified and try to quantify other gender gaps, such as the savings gap, the pensions gap and the investment gap.

There’s a gender insurance gap too, which doesn’t get quite as much attention.

There are obviously many reasons that all these gaps exist, and some are more tangible or valid than others, but there is a specific insurance gap that should be of particular interest to legal expenses insurers.

Two-tier justice?

The gender justice gap has been identified as a global issue and spans both civil and criminal justice. In the UK, various pieces of research have highlighted gaps in the justice system, in terms of both access and outcomes for women.

One area of civil justice with evidence for a gender justice gap is employment law. Covering the costs of employment disputes is one of the key benefits of both personal and commercial legal expenses policies and one of the covers under which the most claims are made.

There are obviously certain types of employment claim that are only relevant to women, such as suffering a detriment or unfair selection for redundancy on the grounds of pregnancy, as well as other grounds for claim that women are much more likely to face, such as sex discrimination and unequal pay.

Beyond these areas, however, women seem to have been at another disadvantage. Research on employment tribunal data for the decade between 2011 and 2021 showed that men were more likely than women to have their dispute reach a tribunal.

The reasons for this are obviously diverse and complex, but it remains to be seen whether increased employment protections, such as the Worker Protection Act 2023, implemented late last year will have any impact.

Adding injury to insult

Another area of justice inequity that should be of interest to insurers relates to employer’s liability (EL). The Association of Personal Injury Lawyers (Apil) has analysed data to reveal that, despite representing more than half of work-related illnesses and injuries, women are only about a third as likely as men to make an EL claim.

Again, the reasons that women seem to have far less access to justice in these circumstances are multifarious but, on the face of it, this looks like another route to justice that seems more accessible to men than women.

Getting better?

It would be nice to think that the UK’s attitude to and treatment of women in the workplace has improved in recent years, but research published just last week would suggest otherwise.

A large survey commissioned by the charity Pregnant Then Screwed shows that the number of women who have lost a job after getting pregnant or taking maternity leave has increased by more than a third since 2016.

The survey also revealed that just 2% of the women who had experienced negative consequences at work as a result of their pregnancy, maternity leave or return to work, pursued an employment tribunal claim. 

Legal expenses insurers play a valuable role in removing the financial impediment that often blocks paths to justice, but it seems clear that a wider cultural shift is also needed.

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