Last week TAEN published the latest edition of its 50+ Jobseekers Survey. In some ways the results
are predictable – surveys so often tell us things that we already know by
instinct – but there are surprising insights too.
ONS figures show more older people in work and there is a
general feeling that older people are doing reasonably well in the labour
market.
The sad fact is however, that
deeply embedded structural disadvantages and ingrained ageist attitudes bar
hundreds of thousands of older people from returning to work. It is clear that
older jobseekers struggle harder than most. Overwhelmingly they want to work
because of financial need, a desire to feel valued and the social interaction
work brings. Many are ‘worried’ or ‘desperate’ about not working.
They identify adverse attitudes by
recruiters, mismatches of their own skills or qualifications with employers’
needs and the national focus on youth unemployment as being among the reasons
for their problems.
These barriers faced by older
jobseekers continue more than six years after age discrimination was outlawed
by the 2006 Age Regulations and two years after the end of the Default
Retirement Age (DRA), allowing people to be forcibly retired at 65.
Today, despite these reforming
legal changes, the challenge of ending age discrimination is as relevant as
ever. Only one in ten over 50s looking for work think age discrimination law
had helped them.
47 per cent of our older jobseekers
believed that the law had not had any benefit at all. One respondent, a former
managing director seeking work, commented, “Age discrimination is rife in my
view. Employers can work out your age with ease.”
Some respondents even volunteered
the view that repeal of the DRA had made it harder to get work!
A former HR manager commented,
“Given that compulsory retirement is now not available I suspect that many
employers are reluctant to recruit older staff who, they fear, may present
motivational and even attendance issues in future.”
One could argue that finding work
has always been bad
for older jobseekers. Blaming the end of the DRA on their current problems may
be misreading the problem.
Moreover, those completing our
survey as “older jobseekers” were by definition people who had not (so far)
succeeded in getting work. Others who had been successful might have offered different views – if
we had asked them.
Nonetheless, how do we respond to
our respondents who claimed their problems could be explained by employers
being charier about hiring people who want to work longer, now the DRA has been
removed?
Perhaps they are right.
We have a labour market that is
ambivalent in its attitudes to older people. Employers will allow them to work
longer in the same jobs if they wish but they bottle out of offering them new jobs, believing they may
want to work for ever.People are working longer in part because they can choose to remain in work longer but the
lot of the older person who has left a job is problematic.
He or she is likely to fall outside
the person specification offered by employers to recruitment agencies, simply
on grounds of age. And there is significant evidence (anecdotal, of course)
that some recruitment agencies connive with employers and fail to challenge
ageist attitudes. (See Loughborough
University’s Working Late project for example).
It seems clear that the law is
being flouted with impunity and there is a presumption that, ‘of course employers
will discriminate by age if they wish to so’. The eradication of age
discrimination in employment is a far from complete.
The time has surely come to assess
the effectiveness of the law against age discrimination in recruitment. The
Equality and Human Rights Commission has the power to launch official enquiries
and undertake formal investigations. What is stopping it?
Short of carrying a recording device and hoping someone slips and admits the "real" reason they don't want you, the problem is that there's NO WAY to prove it. (And here in the US recording conversations on the QT is illegal anyway.)
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