Ageism in the office is hurting workplace productivity

Date:

Share post:



As the U.S. workforce grows older, the problems around ageism in the office are coming to a head. Elder millennials, Gen X, and boomer employees all say they’re experiencing serious discrimination issues, and it’s hurting their morale. 

About 90% of U.S. workers aged 40 or older say they have experienced ageism in the workplace, according to a new report from Resume Now, a jobs platform. The most glaring example is compensation—nearly half of these older workers report earning less than their younger colleagues, according to the study. And the same proportion of respondents, about 49%, say they make less money than Gen Z and younger millennial workers for doing the same job. 

Older millennials, Gen Xers, and boomers say they’re also being given fewer opportunities to progress in their roles, creating barriers in their career growth. About 22% of employees 40 years or older say their work environments pass up older colleagues for challenging assignments, according to the report. Nearly all survey participants said that ageism limits their access to professional development and training services, and around 16% of respondents say their employer engages in a pattern of passing over older workers for promotions in favor of younger counterparts who may have fewer qualifications.

Unsurprisingly, this ageism is impacting the way workers show up to their jobs. Discrimination bulldozes employee well-being: of workers aged 40 or older who have faced ageism, 45% say the bias made them feel isolated and lonely, 44% suffered from depression, and 36% experienced anxiety.

Unfortunately, ageism can be difficult to prove and police, putting up roadblocks for affected staffers to advocate for themselves. About 94% of survey participants who have faced age bias say they have reported the discrimination to their HR teams, but only 45% say that HR mediated the situation. Among workers who have faced ageism, about 37% of those who reported the situation say the ageist coworker was given a warning, 30% said they got a slap on the wrist but weren’t fired, 23% say the person was terminated, and 5% said administration took no action.

There’s no doubt that the workforce is getting older. And as long as ageism persists, HR leaders must work to help companies dismantle their bias, create more equitable career advancement opportunities, and recognize that America’s aging workforce should be respected for their contributions

Emma Burleigh
emma.burleigh@fortune.com

Around the Table

A round-up of the most important HR headlines.

One of the most pressing concerns among striking dock workers is that their jobs will be overtaken by automation, with picket signs reading “Machines don’t feed families.” Business Insider

The Vatican bank fired a male and female employee couple, dubbed “Romeo and Juliet” of the company, for staying together despite a ban on workplace marriages between staffers. The Guardian 

The head of one of the biggest Black-focused media companies says that Hollywood’s budget cuts and the general rollback of DEI initiatives are hurting underrepresented entertainment workers. Bloomberg

Watercooler

Everything you need to know from Fortune.

Underhanded. Economists and experts say that Amazon’s five-day RTO mandate was a head-cutting measure—a way to reduce its workforce without turning to mass layoffs. —Sasha Rogelberg

At odds. Dyson rolled out surprise layoffs in Singapore following its positive earnings call this week, —and still plans to reduce its U.K. workforce by a third. —Ryan Hogg 

Tech turmoil. OpenAI just debuted its newest model, GPT4-o, but employees say leadership was embroiled in arguments and that staffers experienced constant pressure to build advanced products at a fast pace. —Jeremy Kahn, Sharon Goldman, Kali Hays

This is the web version of CHRO Daily, a newsletter focusing on helping HR executives navigate the needs of the workplace. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related articles

What Are The 4 Stages Of Money Laundering? » Finance & Banking

Imagine you have some money, but it’s “dirty” because you got it from something illegal, like selling...

NFL ‘Sunday Ticket’ Is Coming to More Bars, Restaurants

NFL fans just scored another way to stream their favorite NFL...

Pininfarina B95 Gotham at South OC Cars and Coffee

{"@context":"http://schema.org/","@id":"https://johnchow.com/pininfarina-b95-gotham-at-south-oc-cars-and-coffee/#arve-youtube-ly7nrl50xju-2","type":"VideoObject","embedURL":"https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/Ly7nRL50XJU?feature=oembed&iv_load_policy=3&modestbranding=1&rel=0&autohide=1&playsinline=0&autoplay=0"} While Batman has the Batmobile, Bruce Wayne has the Pininfarina B95 Gotham. A visionary collaboration between Automobili...