LABOUR has vowed to close the pay gap between men and women within a decade - 50 years earlier than the Conservative Government is on course for say campaigners.

The Opposition said it would roll out a host of wage-related measures - including fining companies with gender pay gaps - to ensure women were on an equal footing with men in the workplace by 2030.

Dawn Butler, the Shadow Women and Equalities Secretary, said it was "not good enough" that, under Tory plans, the gender pay gap would take until almost 2080 according to equality campaign charity the Fawcett Society.

"Labour's real living wage, robust gender pay auditing - including fining organisations that fail to take action - will help us deliver real change and meet this ambitious target," declared Ms Butler, who has thrown her hat in the ring to replace Tom Watson as Labour’s deputy leader.

Data compiled by the Office for National Statistics shows that the average gender pay gap for full-time work stands at just over 13 per cent in the UK.

According to the Fawcett Society, it would take 60 years for that gulf to be bridged if the current improvement rate overseen by the Tory-led Government continued.

The Trades Union Congress estimates it would take closer to 35 years - until 2054 - to close the gap.

Theresa May, the former Prime Minister, introduced gender pay gap reporting for companies with 250 employees or more in 2017.

Labour's 2030 election campaign promise has been made to coincide with today, dubbed "equal pay day," when women effectively stop getting paid for the rest of the year compared to their male counterparts due to the disparity in wages.

Labour’s pledges include:

*introducing a £10 an hour minimum wage;

*creating a workers' protection agency with powers to fine organisations that fail to report and act on their gender pay gap;

*a requirement that all employers with more than 250 employees obtain government certification on gender equality or face further auditing and fines - the threshold would be lowered to businesses with 50-plus staff by the end of 2020;

*making gender equality certificates a necessity for companies bidding for public sector contracts;

*strengthening protections against unfair dismissal and redundancies with extra rights for pregnant women;

*rolling out collective bargaining to raise the floor on pay across entire sectors;

*introducing national minimum-level pay scales in low-paid sectors with overwhelmingly female workforces, such as childcare and school support staff;

*applying pay ratios to private companies and enforce maximum pay ratios of 20:1 in the public sector and

*requiring large employers to introduce a menopause workplace policy to break the "associated stigma".

Laura Pidcock, the Shadow Employment Rights Secretary, said: "For far too long the interests of working women have been at the bottom of the list of priorities for government.

"Labour in government will be uncompromising in tackling the structural barriers that is holding so many women back. Employers will no longer be able to treat the issue of the gender pay gap as an afterthought.

“Instead, they will be expected to take proactive steps to close it. Labour will deliver the real change that women need in the workplace," she added.

Frances O'Grady, the TUC General Secretary, voiced support for the "bold" policy plans put forward by Labour.

"These proposals would help bring about real change for working women,” she declared.

"Too many employers are getting away with treating women like second-class citizens, especially when they have children."

But Liz Truss, the UK Government’s Women and Equalities Minister, was dismissive of Labour’s plans, saying: "Yet again Corbyn's Labour are overpromising something they cannot deliver.

“Jeremy Corbyn will subject the British people to the chaos of two more referendums, meaning he won't be able to focus on priorities like opportunities for women."

Matthew Fell, CBI chief UK Policy Director, stressed that the gender pay gap was caused by a wide range of factors.

"Some of those - such as the availability of childcare, career progression and improved careers advice - require business and government to work in partnership to deliver lasting change.

"Ninety-three per cent of firms are already taking action; Labour should engage with businesses to get behind and accelerate their efforts, rather than adding bureaucracy with government certification," he added.