Age discrimination in employment
- Employment discrimination against the elderly
- Denial of rights to equal opportunities of employment for elderly
- Active prejudice towards aged employees
- Constraints against employment of older people
- Discrimination in favour of youth in employment
- Preference of younger people for work
- Age bias in the labour force
- Age bias
Nature
Some workers experience difficulties on account of their age in keeping or obtaining employment. Although the ageing processes advance at different speeds in different individuals, most people reach their peak, physically and mentally, between the ages of 25 and 30, and thereafter decline. Manual skills are at their maximum at an even younger age. Decreasing abilities may be at least partially offset by increasing stamina, experience, and common sense. However, the chance of illness also increases with age.
There are many misconceptions about the efficiency of older workers: they are inflexible, lack energy, do not keep up with the latest developments in high-technology, cost more to employ, are more subject to ill health, are less productive. These misconceptions, even when unfounded, lead to discrimination against older people in employment. While it is true that, in many countries, employer contributions to social security are higher for older than for younger workers, giving rise to the assumption that older workers are less cost-effective than younger ones, research shows that training older workers is often more cost-effective than training younger ones, because the older workers are more receptive and attentive.
Discrimination against older workers can take many forms. In some countries, where decreasing numbers of young people are coming into the job market, companies are recruiting older people, but generally for part-time, or second class jobs: this is a more sophisticated form of discrimination.
Incidence
In the USA 40 is the age at which employees can bring lawsuits under federal employment law claiming age discrimination in the workplace. About 45% of American workers are now 40 or older.
Claim
Many executives mistakenly believe that older workers are less productive, especially when they earn more because of seniority. They often find it cheaper in the short-term to lay them off and hire a younger, cheaper person. But there is no evidence that older workers are less productive, except in the decreasing number of jobs requiring significant physical strength.
Age is seldom an asset at work. Even if you are the most creative, innovative and educated person around, you are plagued by the stereotype of the inflexible, out-dated and sickly older worker.
Counter-claim
Although the ageing processes advance at different speeds in different individuals, most people reach their peak, physically and mentally, between the ages of 25 and 30, and thereafter decline. Manual skills are at their maximum at an even younger age. Decreasing abilities may be partially offset by increasing stamina, experience, and common sense, but the chance of illness also increases with age.
Older people do not lose their jobs because of their age, but because of legitimate efforts to reduce costs through job cuts in general, which inevitably affect the large number of workers over 40.