Thank you very much, and for the invitation to appear.
My remarks are drawn from and really build upon the federal 2008 report of the expert panel on older workers, for which I was the research director, as well as my own research on older workers and disabilities. I have prepared some remarks, and I think I'm basically going to follow along the lines of those remarks that I prepared.
I hope to provide you with what is primarily a labour market and workforce perspective on the issue of opportunities for older persons. The first question I would pose is, why would we worry about encouraging older workers to stay in the labour force?
First, from a labour market viewpoint, the aging of the labour force translates into a declining growth rate in the labour force. This can lead, of course, to lower growth in total economic output and may even affect output per person as well. The labour supply issue could be quite significant. Best estimates are that immigration alone cannot come close to counteracting the effects of the aging of the population on the labour force, so there are two considerations. First, more older workers can be encouraged to participate in the labour force at all ages on an ongoing basis. Second, older workers can be encouraged to work for more years.
Second, from a personal economic viewpoint, some older workers may need the income, either as a primary source of income or to supplement a pension.
Third, from a personal or social viewpoint, older workers may seek fulfillment from meaningful employment.
I want to turn briefly to some background labour market context for older workers. It's pretty clear that workplaces and labour markets in general are subject to several long-term pressures that are particularly relevant to older workers. First and foremost, of course, is economic globalization and all that this entails. This has created significant pressures on certain industries, causing job losses in such industries as forestry, paper, segments of manufacturing in some primary industries, and is especially relevant in single-industry-town situations. Second is technological change, which renders certain skills obsolete, requiring basic retraining and education. It also requires constant up-skilling, with new skills being required on the same job, and this is especially a challenge for older workers, who typically have lower levels of education.
I want to turn very briefly to labour market characteristics of older workers.
What is the situation of older workers in the labour market, recognizing, of course, that it changes over time and in relation to overall economic conditions? First, with respect to the configuration of jobs, older workers tend more often than other groups to find themselves in non-standard jobs that are part-time or in contract-type positions. This provides flexibility for older workers to meet other requirements, such as a desire for fewer hours to meet their personal preferences, supplement retirement income, or balance work and other family obligations. However, other older workers may work part time or non-standard work but not be able to obtain full-time employment that they desire.
Second, both the employment rates and participation rates of older workers are by far the lowest in the labour force. They tend to be less than 40%, relative to about 65% to 70% for the workforce generally.
Third, with regard to the unemployment experience of older workers, their rate of unemployment tends to be lower than the overall unemployment rate, but once employed, their period of unemployment tends to last longer and their loss of earnings relative to pre-unemployment earnings levels tends to be larger. That is, the new job the older worker gets typically pays less than the job they just lost.
There are also important differences in unemployment rates of older workers: a lower unemployment rate in urban areas relative to rural, and significant differences across regions of Canada, typically running lower moving from the east to the west.
Finally, I'd like to turn to some of the barriers for older workers. Many older workers have been employed in industries and/or in single-industry areas that are in decline, or they simply experience long-term employment situations. And older workers tend to have less education and advanced training, whereas the younger groups tend to be better educated and trained. So several problems arise.
First, many older workers have skills that are very specific to their previous or long-term job, and retraining may need to be extensive in cases where an entirely new job is the objective.
Second, investing in older workers, in terms of training and education, leaves a shorter period in which to capture returns to that investment, and the fact that many have lower levels of education to start with means that further learning is even more challenging.
Third, older workers may experience bias from employers who simply believe that younger workers are better learners.
Fourth, in seeking jobs elsewhere, relocation costs can be quite high because of home transfer costs, community investments, family bonds, and so forth.
Finally, with respect to aging and disability, the percentage of employed Canadians with a disability rises from just over 3% among those between the ages of 20 and 24 to reach well over 12% by the time Canadians reach the 60 to 64 age range. We can therefore predict with some confidence that a growing share of Canadian workers will have disabilities and will want or need to continue working, notwithstanding the fact that they have disabilities.
If they are to work productively and with equal opportunity, many will need employers to design, adapt, and manage workplaces so as to enable them to overcome activity limitations; in short, they will need accommodation.
In our own research we find that a sizeable fraction of persons with disabilities say they are not receiving the accommodations they in fact need in order to work, and to work productively. Widespread employee reports of accommodation shortfalls are consistent with other research documenting the frequent negative influence of information gaps, stereotyping, economic incentives or disincentives to accommodate these workers, workplace cultural resistance, and so forth related to persons with disabilities.
These considerations point to the need to consider a coordinated national strategy to address workplace accommodation gaps. This approach has the benefit of providing a degree of universal measure that enhances access to effective accommodation across all employees in workplaces, while ensuring there is minimal opportunity for economic disincentives to accommodate. A universal program in this specific area could, for example, take the form of a highly coordinated federal-provincial set of policies that taken together provide fairly complete coverage.
In conclusion, I'd like to identify several overarching themes that emerge regarding older workers.
First is simply acknowledging that there is a meaningful role, or roles, for the federal government in supporting the participation and employment of older workers.
Second is that active support measures for human capital development, including general education and specific training, remain essential to encouraging meaningful work for older persons, and to achieve results on a broad scale government support, at some level, would likely be required.
Third, the federal government should consider, first, targeting policy very carefully, especially in terms of addressing specific barriers to older workers; second, continuing to examine current programs to ensure that they minimize disincentives to participate in the labour force; and third, taking a lead on encouraging accommodation for workers with disability, a problem that will become increasingly important as the workforce ages.
Thank you.