Few
companies are addressing aging workforce issues yet
Gord
Hart, Partner, Employee Benefits & Pensions
Almost
80% of Canadian organizations believe they will face the
consequences of an aging workforce within the next five
years, but few are taking steps now to address impending
retirement-induced labour shortages, according to a Conference
Board of Canada survey..
"Canadian organizations are aware that
by 2015 there will not be enough qualified people to go
around. For the most part, they are doing little to tackle
the problem," said Senior Research Associate, Owen
Parker. "Employers will have to develop more effective
ways of managing their aging workforce to maintain operational
continuity."
Based on the survey of 137 corporate executives
conducted in 2005, 23% of respondents are already feeling
the effects of an aging workforce on their organization,
and four in five believe they will be affected within five
years. The findings are published in a briefing, Too Few
People, Too Little Time: The Employer Challenge of an Aging
Workforce.
One source of labour is older workers, yet
the survey found that recruitment and retention programs
and policies targeted at mature workers are applied inconsistently.
Half the respondents indicated that their organizations
devote little or no effort to retaining their own older
workers, and few employers are looking to attract retirees
who may be looking for new employment possibilities.
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