Fears for employers as default retirement age is set to be abolished

-

According to a survey conducted by Shoosmiths employers are deeply concerns about what will happen when the default retirement age of 65 is scrapped in October 2011.

The national law firm asked readers of its HR briefing, WortHReading, about retirement ages in their organisations, how they expected to deal with the abolition of the default retirement age and their concerns about the change.

Only 20% of those who took part in the survey worked in organisations that had already abolished retirement ages, with 80% still relying on a formal retirement age.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Participants of the survey were evenly split when it came to predicting whether organisations were expecting a significant increase in those wanting to work beyond 65: 42% thought most employees would still want to retire at 65, with 41% believing more would want to stay on.
Only half of respondents thought their organisation would abolish retirement ages altogether, 20% thought that retirement ages would be kept for some rolls but not others, while 23% thought they would retain a retirement age for all roles.

Partner and head of employment Kevin McCavish said: “While this might suggest that next year’s legal changes will have a significant practical impact on employers and employees, the results reveal that the retirement age may not be pensioned off as quickly as predicted.”

Employers’ main concerns were employees refusing to retire when they are no longer up to the job (75%), uncertainty of not knowing whether someone will be retiring or not (61%), increased difficulty of workforce planning (49%), negative effect on younger workers – lack of opportunity to progress/loss of motivation (43%), lots of older employees wanting to go part-time (42%), cost of providing benefits to older employees.



Paul Gray is an entrepreneur and digital publisher who creates online publications focused on solving problems, delivering news, and providing platforms for informed comment and debate. He is associated with HRZone and has built businesses in the HR and professional publishing sector. His work emphasizes creating industry-specific content platforms.

Latest news

Amy Speake: Why a cooling job market is the worst time to hire a leader

A slowing labour market should be a hiring manager's dream. But anyone trying to recruit a leader capable of driving real commercial growth will tell you otherwise.

Bezos joins growing pushback against AI jobs apocalypse claims

Tech leaders are increasingly questioning predictions of mass workforce disruption, arguing new tools could expand opportunities and ease skills shortages.

Workers say staying in the wrong job is their biggest career mistake

Nearly four in five workers have career regrets, with staying too long in the wrong role and working excessive hours among the most common concerns.

Unemployment falls as private sector pay growth slows to 2.9%

Official figures show unemployment edged lower but vacancies, payroll employment and private sector wage growth continued to weaken.
- Advertisement -

Building trust through growth, change and uncertainty

An HR director reflects on culture, communication and leadership during a period of major business transformation and growth.

Performance reviews leave many workers feeling ‘less positive’

More than a third of employees say they felt less positive about their role after their last performance review, raising concerns about engagement and retention.

Must read

Karis Stander – Diversifying financial services: from entry points to employees

Corporate apprenticeship and traineeship programmes are on the rise in financial services, according to Karis Stander, Managing Director of Investment2020.

Michael Kerrigan: How to manage workplace stress

As a nation we are struggling to manage workplace stress – a problem we should reflect on after April’s ‘Stress Awareness Month’, says Michael Kerrigan.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you