Age
discrimination visible, older workers urged to stay on the
job
National Study Suggests Many Keep Working Out of Financial
Necessity
New
York, November 16, 2005 – While nearly a quarter (23 percent) of the U.S. workforce knows of an
older worker who has been denied a job, promotion or raise
because of age, more than twice as many businesses encourage
older workers to stay on the job than to retire early.
According to a national Hudson survey, 38 percent of workers
say their organizations keep older workers because they are
difficult to replace, compared to 15 percent whose firms
want to make way for younger workers.
Entrepreneurs and small-business operators are especially eager to retain
older workers; 49 percent encourage them to stay on the job,
compared to 11 percent promoting retirement. Conversely, 26
percent of government workers say retirement is actively
encouraged.
Many organizations – and particularly larger ones – proactively take
steps to take advantage of older workers’ experience.
Thirty-five percent of respondents say their firms offer
formal mentoring programs to pair a younger worker with an
older one for guidance and training. That number rises to
50 percent among companies with 250-500 employees. Among
those employees whose firms offer such programs, 51 percent
say their firms encourage older workers to stay.
“With 76 million baby boomers approaching retirement age, retaining older
workers is not so much a choice as a necessity,” said Alicia
Barker, vice president of human resources, Hudson North
America. “That said, organizations that go beyond
accommodation to active engagement of older workers stand to
benefit from a loyal, hardworking labor force that offers
tremendous experience and institutional knowledge.”
Even as
companies do more to keep workers on the job longer, those
workers themselves may not have a choice. According to a
Hudson survey earlier this year, 74 percent of U.S. workers
plan to work at least part-time during their retirement
years. This month’s survey found that 57 percent of workers
believe that people continue to work beyond retirement age
because they need money, while just 27 percent say it is
because they enjoy having something to do.
|
|
All Workers |
Entrepreneurs |
Government |
Private |
|
Believe their company encourages older workers to
stay on job |
38% |
49% |
30% |
13% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Believe their company encourages older workers to
retire |
15% |
11% |
49% |
35% |
The Hudson
aging workforce survey is based on a national poll of 1,075
U.S. workers and was compiled by Rasmussen Reports, LLC, an
independent research firm (RasmussenReports.com). They
survey respondents make up a cross-section of the U.S.
workforce. A more detailed data report is available at
www.hudson-index.com.