[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 29, Volume 4]
[Revised as of July 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 29CFR1620.14]

[Page 311-312]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
                               COMMISSION
 
PART 1620_THE EQUAL PAY ACT--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1620.14  Testing equality of jobs.

    (a) In general. What constitutes equal skill, equal effort, or equal 
responsibility cannot be precisely defined. In interpreting these key 
terms of the statute, the broad remedial purpose of the law must be 
taken into consideration. The terms constitute separate tests, each of 
which must be met in order for the equal pay standard to apply. It 
should be kept in mind that ``equal'' does not mean ``identical.'' 
Insubstantial or minor differences in the degree or amount of skill, or 
effort, or responsibility required for the performance of jobs will not 
render the equal pay standard inapplicable. On the other hand, 
substantial differences, such as those customarily associated with 
differences in wage levels when the jobs are performed by persons of one 
sex only, will ordinarily demonstrate an inequality as between the jobs 
justifying differences in pay. However, differences in skill, effort or 
responsibility which might be sufficient to justify a finding that two 
jobs are not equal within the meaning of the EPA if the greater skill, 
effort, or responsibility has been required of the higher paid sex, do 
not justify such a finding where the greater skill, effort, or 
responsibility is required of the lower paid sex. In determining whether 
job differences are so substantial as to make jobs unequal, it is 
pertinent to inquire whether and to what extent significance has been 
given to such differences in setting the wage levels for such jobs. Such 
an inquiry may, for example, disclose that apparent differences between 
jobs have not been recognized as relevant for wage purposes and that the 
facts as a whole support the conclusion that the differences are too 
insubstantial to prevent the jobs from being equal in all significant 
respects under the law.
    (b) Illustrations of the concept. Where employees of opposite sexes 
are employed in jobs in which the duties they are required to perform 
and the working conditions are substantially the same, except that an 
employee of one sex is required to perform some duty or duties involving 
a higher skill which an employee of the other sex is not required to 
perform, the fact that the duties are different in this respect is 
insufficient to remove the jobs from the application of the equal pay 
standard if it also appears that the employer is paying a lower wage 
rate to the employee performing the additional duties notwithstanding 
the additional skill which they involve. In other situations, where 
employees of the opposite sex are employed in jobs which are equal in 
the levels of skill, effort, and responsibility required for their 
performance, it may be alleged that the assignment to employees of one 
sex but not the other of certain duties requiring less skill makes the 
jobs too different for comparison under the equal pay provisions. But so 
long as the higher level of skill is required for the performance of the 
jobs occupied by employees of both sexes, the fact that some of the 
duties assigned to employees of one sex require less skill than the 
employee must have for the job as a whole does not warrant any 
conclusion that the jobs are outside the purview of the equal pay 
standard.
    (c) Determining equality of job content in general. In determining 
whether employees are performing equal work within the meaning of the 
EPA, the amounts of time which employees

[[Page 312]]

spend in the performance of different duties are not the sole criteria. 
It is also necessary to consider the degree of difference in terms of 
skill, effort, and responsibility. These factors are related in such a 
manner that a general standard to determine equality of jobs cannot be 
set up solely on the basis of a percentage of time. Consequently, a 
finding that one job requires employees to expend greater effort for a 
certain percentage of their working time than employees performing 
another job, would not in itself establish that the two jobs do not 
constitute equal work. Similarly, the performance of jobs on different 
machines or equipment would not necessarily result in a determination 
that the work so performed is unequal within the meaning of the statute 
if the equal pay provisions otherwise apply. If the difference in skill 
or effort required for the operation of such equipment is 
inconsequential, payment of a higher wage rate to employees of one sex 
because of a difference in machines or equipment would constitute a 
prohibited wage rate differential. Where greater skill or effort is 
required from the lower paid sex, the fact that the machines or 
equipment used to perform substantially equal work are different does 
not defeat a finding that the EPA has been violated. Likewise, the fact 
that jobs are performed in different departments or locations within the 
establishment would not necessarily be sufficient to demonstrate that 
unequal work is involved where the equal pay standard otherwise applies. 
This is particularly true in the case of retail establishments, and 
unless a showing can be made by the employer that the sale of one 
article requires such higher degree of skill or effort than the sale of 
another article as to render the equal pay standard inapplicable, it 
will be assumed that the salesmen and saleswomen concerned are 
performing equal work. Although the equal pay provisions apply on an 
establishment basis and the jobs to be compared are those in the 
particular establishment, all relevant evidence that may demonstrate 
whether the skill, effort, and responsibility required in the jobs in 
the particular establishment are equal should be considered, whether 
this relates to the performance of like jobs in other establishments or 
not.