Employment Law
The Equal Pay Act refers by the Federal Government outlawing any form of discrimination committed by employers based on sex in the payment of salaries and wages. EPA was enacted as an amendment to the Fair Labor Standards Act. It was aimed at dealing with the shortcomings created from the pay inequities that were rampantly being practiced based on sex. Specifically, there were rampant pay disparities that were faced by female workers. The Title VII of the Civil Rights Act (CRA) was enacted one year after the enactment of the EPA by the congress, which was in 1964. According to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, it is an illegal practice and punishable by law to discriminate an employee in terms of compensation, terms of employment, privileges or conditions based on color, race, national origin, sex or religion (42 U.S.C. 2000e).
Although the two laws serve to ensure equality in employment for both genders, the EPA and CRA of 1964 differ in terms of their coverage, scope, and operation. The Act tends to be partly broader and partly narrower in comparison to the Title VII. On one hand, much of the employment relationship is well covered within the Act's provisions taking...
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