At exactly 2:38 p.m. on October 24, 2016 C.E., thousands of women across Iceland put down their work and walked out the door. The message was precise and deliberate: if women earn roughly 14 percent less than men, then they effectively work for free after that moment every day. So they stopped.
What the evidence shows
- Icelandic gender pay gap: Women in Iceland earned 14 to 18 percent less than men in 2016 C.E., meaning they worked without pay from 2:38 p.m. onward each day.
- Women’s walkout: Thousands of Icelandic women left their workplaces simultaneously at 2:38 p.m. to dramatize the pay disparity — a tactic echoing a historic 1975 C.E. women’s strike.
- Pay gap timeline: At the rate of progress measured in 2016 C.E., researchers estimated it would take 52 more years to close Iceland’s gender pay gap entirely.
A country with a long record of fighting back
Iceland is not new to this kind of collective action. On October 24, 1975 C.E. — exactly 41 years before the 2016 C.E. walkout — roughly 90 percent of Iceland’s women refused to work, cook, or provide childcare. The country essentially stopped. Shops closed. Newspapers couldn’t print. It was one of the most successful labor actions in modern European history.
The effects were lasting. Before that 1975 C.E. strike, only nine women had ever held seats in Iceland’s parliament. Five years later, Vigdís Finnbogadóttir became the world’s first democratically elected female head of state. By 1999 C.E., more than a third of Iceland’s members of parliament were women.
In 2000 C.E., Iceland passed landmark parental leave legislation that gave both parents equal leave entitlements. Today, 90 percent of Icelandic fathers take parental leave — and research has found they remain more involved in childcare and housework long after the leave ends. These are not small achievements.
Why the 2016 C.E. walkout still mattered
Even with that record, the pay gap had barely budged. Women across sectors — in offices, hospitals, schools, and shops — were still taking home significantly less than their male colleagues. The 2016 C.E. protest made that abstract statistic visceral and visible.
Unions and women’s organizations coordinated the action across the country. In Reykjavík, crowds gathered outside the parliament building. The protest drew workers from across industries and age groups. It was not just a symbolic gesture — it was a direct assertion that equal pay is not a future aspiration but a present demand.
Gylfi Arnbjörnsson, president of the Icelandic Confederation of Labor, put it plainly: “It doesn’t matter whether it’s a gender pay gap or any other pay gap. It’s just unacceptable to say we’ll correct this in 50 years. That’s a lifetime.”
Lasting impact
The 2016 C.E. walkout was part of a chain of pressure that produced real policy. In 2018 C.E., Iceland became the first country in the world to make it illegal to pay men more than women for the same work — shifting the burden of proof onto employers to certify pay equity, rather than requiring workers to prove discrimination. Companies with 25 or more employees must now obtain government certification that their pay structures are equal.
That law did not come from nowhere. It came from decades of organized pressure, public strikes, and moments like October 24, 2016 C.E., when thousands of women made an invisible injustice impossible to ignore.
The Icelandic model has since influenced policy conversations in countries around the world grappling with how to move from good intentions to enforceable standards. The idea that pay equity should be certified — not assumed — is now being studied and piloted elsewhere.
Blindspots and limits
Iceland’s progress on gender equity, while genuinely impressive, has not been evenly distributed. Women from immigrant communities and those in low-wage service work often face compounding disadvantages that aggregate pay gap statistics can obscure. The 2018 C.E. equal pay certification law applies to companies with 25 or more employees, leaving smaller workplaces without the same scrutiny. And even with the law in place, full enforcement and cultural change remain ongoing challenges — the gap has narrowed, but it has not closed.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Women in the World / The New York Times
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Marie-Louise Eta becomes the first female head coach in men’s top-flight European football
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40 percent since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Iceland
About this article
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