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Publication Detailed Description
Proceedings of the 22nd International Sustainable Development Research Society Conference (ISDRS 2016)
Year (definitive publication)
2016
Language
English
Country
Portugal
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Abstract
Ageing is a global trend and one of the greater challenges of the current societies, with strong
consequences on general population and particularly on workforce composition. In fact, ageing
issues were been stressed on the agenda of European policies over the last years, with the
establishment of goals intended to increase the employment rate of 55-64 workers and also
increase of the retirement age. Demographic changes have a great impact on the composition of
workforce. According to the 5th European Working Conditions Survey workers aged 50 and over
represent 25% of employees in EU, which places a new challenge for corporate social
responsibility. The most common answer for ageing at work has been the encouragement of
ageing workers to remain active and at the same time convince companies to retain these older
workers. But this aim cannot be achieved without an adaptive change of working conditions,
considering the health and needs of older workers, providing the access to lifelong learning and
rethinking benefits, rewards, participation, recognition and careers. Are companies aware of
demographic trends and their impacts? Do the companies perceive ageing as a “social concern”
or a “management issue”? Are they prepared to face this challenge inside them? In this sense, the
purpose of our studies, conducted in Portugal, is to provide a comprehensive approach on age
management topic, based on literature review but also on empirical work developed with Human
Resources managers, trying to understand how companies evaluate and manage ageing, in the
context of corporate social responsibility. Our findings suggest that Human Resources managers
are generally concerned with age but they usually see this as an external problem, being mainly a
society issue. Age is not being taken as a real challenge for companies while economic recession
and youth unemployment are shaping the labor market. While economic recession is transitory,
ageing is a structural trend and cannot be answered without a long-term approach based on public
policies gathered with management practices. The managers’ short-term vision is a barrier to a
strategic development and undermines the sustainability of organizations.
Acknowledgements
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Keywords
Demographic changes,Age management,Sustainable work,Corporate social responsibility
Funding Records
Funding Reference | Funding Entity |
---|---|
UID/GES/00315/2013 | Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia |