Number of sex discrimination cases going to court falls by 80 per cent

The number of people taking out sex discrimination cases has fallen by 80 per cent since the introduction of fees for taking cases to employment tribunal, according to the TUC.

The number of people taking out sex discrimination cases has fallen by 80 per cent since the introduction of fees for taking cases to employment tribunal, according to the TUC.

The TUC says figures published by the Ministry of Justice todayshow that fees are deterring many workers from taking their employers to court. It says there has been a 59 per cent drop in the number of single claims being taken to employment tribunals – from 13,739 between January and March 2013 to 5,619 in the first three months of 2014. This covers issues like bullying, unfair dismissal and sex discrimination.

TUC General Secretary Frances O’Grady said: “If an employer breaks the law and sacks someone unfairly, sexually harasses them or cheats them out of their wages, it’s understandable that an individual should want to seek some kind of redress.

“In the past there were no fees, and workers who felt they’d been wronged could have their case heard and the tribunal would either find for them or in their employer’s favour. But last summer, the government decided to restrict justice to those who could afford to pay a fee.

“Today’s figures show that many people – especially low-paid workers trying to claw back wages they are owed by their bosses – are being put off making a claim, often because the cost of going to a tribunal is more than the sum of their outstanding wages.

“The huge drop in cases taken certainly doesn’t mean that Britain’s bosses have got a whole lot nicer in the past year. It’s simply because pursuing a complaint against a bad employer has become too expensive for many workers, and that is just plain wrong.”

Today’s figures show an 85 per cent fall in the number of claims for unpaid wages – with just 3,133 claims made in the first three months of 2014, compared with the 21,213 cases lodged during the same period a year previously. Over the same period, sex discrimination cases fell from 6,017 to 1,222 (an 80 per cent fall) and unfair dismissal cases were down by 62 per cent  (from 11,041 to 4,235).





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