Oracle accused of underpaying women, minorities by USD 400M

The allegations emerged Tuesday in a filing made in a two-year-old case that is being pursued by a part of the US Labor Department.

Update: 2019-01-23 05:31 GMT
HPE maintained at trial that Oracle was out to get customers to switch to servers from Sun Microsystems, which Oracle bought in 2010 in a move that added hardware to its software offerings.

US government regulators are accusing software maker Oracle of engaging in discriminatory practices that resulted in thousands of its women, black and Asian employees being underpaid by more than USD 400 million.

The allegations emerged Tuesday in a filing made in a two-year-old case that is being pursued by a part of the US Labor Department that examines the pay practices of government contractors. The agency estimates Oracle has government contracts worth about USD 100 million annually.

The filing cites evidence that Oracle underpaid women and ethnic minorities for similar work done by white men by as much 25 percent. The alleged practices affected more than 5,000 women, more than 11,000 Asians and fewer than 30 blacks from 2013 through 2016.

Oracle declined to comment.

Similar News