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Extending the work life

Extending the work life. Prof. Juhani Ilmarinen, FIOH, Helsinki Tallinn Workshop, September 9-10, 2008. Why should we work longer?. Work life must be extended for the sake of the whole society Can we afford growing older? Higher employment rates and

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Extending the work life

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  1. Extending the work life Prof. Juhani Ilmarinen, FIOH, Helsinki Tallinn Workshop, September 9-10, 2008 Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  2. Why should we work longer? • Work life must be extended for the sake of the whole society • Can we afford growing older? • Higher employment rates and lower dependency ratios are the base for our older society Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  3. Challenges of Employment rates of 55-64-years old International view Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  4. Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  5. Percent increase in employment by age and sex1977-2007( U.S. Bureau of Labour Statistics 2007) • Age 16 and over 59 % • Age 65 and over 101 • Men 65+ 75 • Women 65+ 147 • Age 65-69 85 • Age 70-74 98 • Age 75 and over 172 Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  6. Projected percentage change in labour force age, 2006-2016(U.S. Bureau of Statistics, 2007) • 75 and older 84,3 % • 65 to 74 83,4 • 55 to 64 36,5 • 25 to 54 2,4 • 16 to 24 - 6,9 Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  7. Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  8. secretaries, administrative assistants school teachers reg. nurses bookkeeping, accounting, auditing clerks nurses, home health aides cashiers maids, cleaners first-line supervisors/managers of retail sales managers first-line supervisors/managers of office and administration Top 10 occupations for women 55+(U.S, Department of Labour, 2005) Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  9. 62,6 , 7 Ruotsi 69,6 51,7 , 9 Tanska 60,7 48,3 , 9,1 Iso-Britannia 57,4 35,6 Suomi , 18,9 54,5 40,4 , 12,7 Irlanti 53,1 48,5 , 1,6 Portugali 50,1 38,1 , 10,3 Saksa 48,4 32 , 15,7 Alankomaat 47,7 36,4 EU-15 , 8,9 45,3 1997 34,1 , 10 Espanja 44,1 2006 41 , , Muutos 2006-1997 1,3 Kreikka 42,3 29 , 8,6 Ranska 37,6 28,3 , 7,2 Itävalta 35,5 23,9 , 9,3 Luxemburg 33,2 27,9 , 4,6 Italia 32,5 22,1 , 9,9 Belgia 32 0 20 40 60 Lähde: Työvoimatutkimukset EU-maissa Change in employment rates of 55-64-years 1997-2006, EU-15 Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  10. Employment rates of 60-67-years old from 2003 – 2006 in Finland Source: Center of Statistics, Finland Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  11. How long are we able to work? Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  12. Average Work Ability Index by age Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  13. Cut point of work ability line and WAI-score of 27 points ( poor work ability ) – scientific guess • Cut point will be about 80 years! • After the age of 80 years, the average value of work ability index will be below 27 points, and indicated as poor • Indivividual differences, however, are large – a smaller population would be able to work, if they wish to do so • Older persons are active in 3rd sector and show a good ability to carry out no-paid tasks Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  14. Average Work Ability Index by industrial branch. Adjusted by gender and age, (n=3704) Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  15. Work Ability Index classes by industrial branch, (n=3704) Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  16. Work ability index (WAI) WAI Class WAI 50 49 exellent 45 43 40 good 36 35 moderate 30 27 25 poor 20 15 Carrot project 1998, N=729 10 7 5 Age, yrs 15 25 35 45 55 65 Individual differences of work ability by age in SMEs Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  17. Excellent and good work ability later in life: scientific guess • 55 years 60 % • 65 years 40 % • 75 years 20 % Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  18. Are women able to work longer because they live longer than men? Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  19. Work ability index (7-49) among working men and women by older age groupsGould and Polvinen, 2006 Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  20. Age Management as a concept to extend the working life Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  21. LEVELS OF AGE MANAGEMENT Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  22. Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  23. Promotion of work ability: integration of actions- modified by Dr. Richenhagen Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  24. Age Management Training for Supervisors by sector (employer interview) Work Ability Barometer 2004 / FIOH Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  25. Value of work experience?Are there jobs where experience is needed? Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  26. Value of work experience of older workers by sector (employers) Work ability Barometer 2004 / FIOH Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  27. Proportion of tasks where work experience of older workers is needed by sector (employers) Work Ability Barometer 2004 / FIOH Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  28. Older workers braking the old myths Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  29. Older workers can´t or won´t learn new skills Older workers don´t stay on the job long Older workers take more sick days than younger workers 50+ becoming the fastest growing group of Internet users and learners 45-54 stayed in the job twice as long as those 25-34 Attendance records are better for older than younger workers Myths About Older workers Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  30. Older workers are´t flexible or adaptable Older workers are more expensive Older workers like to question the change; they accept the change when the rationale is explained The costs are outweighted by low turnover decreasing the cost of recruiting, hiring, and training Myths About Older Workers Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  31. Job Search Tips for Older Workers • Emphasize your experience • Network • Make age an asset • Consider a career change • Get help • Keep your skills current • Don´t give up Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  32. Make Age an Asset • Don´t use age as crutch • Anticipate stereotypes and prepare to counter them • Get tech savvy • Focus on experience, not age • Avoid using all dates • Consider consulting and small businesses Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  33. Older sportsmen braking the myths of ageing Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  34. Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  35. Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  36. Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  37. World records in working ? • Individual differences of older people are so large that a growing proposion of them can work very long - if they wish to do so and if employer needs their experiences • Abolishment of upper limit to work will increase the number of people working very long • Entrepeneurs, artists, scientists and politicians are already today examples of longer work careers • Human recourses matter, not the age • Basic question: What is the meaning of life? • We only live twice... Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  38. Extending the working life – policy needs Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  39. Extending the worklife: several actions are urgently needed Comprehensive policy reforms and enterprise practices are necessary in the following areas: • Attitudes reform towards ageing • Management and Leadership reform • Work life reform towards age-friendly worklife • Pension reform for flexible retirement • Health and social care reforms • Co-operation reform between key actors • Implementation of Age Management Best-Practices Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

  40. Accepting human ageing • Everyone should have the right to get older at work! • Working must be adjusted according to ageing processes, not the opposite! Tallinn/ Juhani Ilmarinen 091008/FIOH /

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