Over a third of LGBT+ people have experienced discrimination at work
According to a recent study by the German Institute of Economic Research (DIW), over 30 percent of homosexual people and over 40 percent of transgender people have experienced discrimination at work.
Discrimination in the workplace
According to Bernhard Franke, the acting head of the Federal Anti-Discrimination Office, the results of the study are “consistent with what we know from our own surveys and also from our counselling practice.”
Franke explained that members of the LGBT+ community often experience forms of bullying at work and so feel pressured to keep their sexual identity secret. He added that transgender people often face “an inappropriate, often sexualised interest in private life, imitating or ridiculing voices or gestures or not being able to use toilets according to one's gender identity." Studies have also shown that name changes are often not accepted.
LGBT+ in the workplace
The study by the DIW also showed that employment rates among the LGBT+ community are similar to those among the heterosexual population, but while 60 percent of the LGBT+ community has graduated from technical school or university, only 42 percent of the rest of the population has done the same.
Compared to the rest of the German population, the LGBT+ community works much less in the manufacturing industry but more often in the health and social service industry, as well as the arts and entertainment industry. Franke has called on employers to take action: "Companies should emphasise and promote diversity, not hide it. In addition, it is important to intervene as soon as discrimination is recognised."
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