FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
1
Aging Workforce Culture and the Uncertainty
of
Market SolutionsJames F. Follwell
EconomistPEI Dept. Development & TechnologyLabour Market Development Division
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
2
The views expressed in this presentation are those of its author and do not necessarily reflect the policies or views of the Government of Prince Edward Island
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
3
Components of Presentation
• Review of demographic and labour characteristics of older workers and an aging work force
• Some scenarios emerging from the evolution of an aging population
• Thinking about nature of policies in response to an aging work force – efficient adjustment
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
4
Questions
• Is there a rationale for developing pro-active policies and programs to adjust to an aging workforce? (Or leave to the market?)
• Can we foster an efficient transition?
• Is there a special role for Labour Market information?
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
5
Aging Workforce and Older Workers
• Of course, when we talk about an aging workforce we mean one in which the average age of is advancing, or the larger age classes are getting older
• Older workers are a feature of any workforce, whether it is aging or not
• While subsuming the relative growth of the older age classes in our population and workforce, older workers are a subject of interest for workforce development in any case
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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The Now Familiar Demographic Projections
• The outlook, based on the base population, parameters for life expectancy, health trends, fertility, immigration, and some other factors, is portrayed by the familiar progression dominated by the ascent of the baby boom cohort
• A relatively older population would seem to include a relatively older workforce
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
7
Canada Population and Projections
Source: Statistics Canada, Population Projections for Canada, Provinces and Territories 2005-2031 Cat. #91-520-XIE;Scenario 3 (medium)
Canada Population 2005
1,500 1,000 500 0 500 1,000 1,500
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-89
90+
Persons x 1,000Female Male
Canada Population Projected 2011
1,500 1,000 500 0 500 1,000 1,500
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-89
90+
Persons x 1,000Female Male
Canada Population Projected 2021
1,500 1,000 500 0 500 1,000 1,500
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-89
90+
Persons x 1,000Female Male
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
8
Early Intermediate Term
Canada Population Projected 2011
1,500 1,000 500 0 500 1,000 1,500
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-89
90+
Persons x 1,000Female Male
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
9
PEI Population and Projections
PEI Population 2011 Projected
6 4 2 0 2 4 6
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-89
90+
Persons x 1,000Female Male
PEI Population 2005
6 4 2 0 2 4 6
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-89
90+
Persons x 1,000Female Male
Source: Statistics Canada, Population Projections for Canada, Provinces and Territories 2005-2031 Cat. #91-520-XIE;Scenario 3 (medium)
PEI Population 2021 Projected
6 4 2 0 2 4 6
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-89
90+
Persons x 1,000Female Male
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
10
Early Intermediate Term
PEI Population 2011 Projected
6 4 2 0 2 4 6
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-89
90+
Persons x 1,000Female Male
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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PEI and Canada Age Class Distribution
PEI Population 2011 Projected
-10.0% -5.0% 0.0% 5.0% 10.0%
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-89
90+
Percent of TotalFemale Male
Canada Population Projected 2011
-10% -5% 0% 5% 10%
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-89
90+
Percent of TotalFemale Male
PEI population will have a somewhat higher proportion of pre-retirement age folks, but as well, relatively more workforce entering age
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Are These Demographic Trends Inevitable?
• Sure looks like it!• Fertility rates are not rising significantly
and if they were, it wouldn’t matter for the planning horizon
• Immigration into Canada is managed and is unlikely to be ramped up very much
• Are there any unknown factors which could make a difference in the demographic trend?
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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The PEI Labour Force – Older Workers Profile
• Age classes 55 to 64 during the period 1996 to 2005
• The proportion of the population (15+) rose from 11.0% to nearly 15%
• Proportion of labour force increased from about 8% to over 13%
• Proportion employed increased from 8% to over 13%
• Proportion of unemployed increased from about 9% to 14.5%
• Unemployment rate among 55 to 59 declined but among 60 to 64 varied and ended unchanged (15%)
Source: Statcan LFHR
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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PEI Labour Force– Perspective on EI Beneficiaries
• Analysis of EI data on beneficiaries suggests that older workers are almost twice as likely to receive EI benefits as they are represented in the labour force
• At about 16% of the annual average number of beneficiaries, this level is similar in both urban and rural areas of PEI
• We do not have a time series sufficient to show a trend
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Older Workers – Do we really Know Them?
Views about older workers include, they…• bring valuable experience, knowledge and know-how to the
workplace• have diminishing productivity• lean more slowly• learn more efficiently• have diminished productivity because of declining health• are more reliable• are loyal• perform dependably• can pass along experience and act as mentors for younger and
core age workers• should retire so that core age and younger workers can move
up the organizational ladder• are less innovative and creative• bring practical ideas to the workplace …
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Aging Workforce Culture
• An amalgam of attitudes from all age classes• Reflects dominant groups’ attitudes created in post WWII era
• Expectations for continuing economic growth• Older workers lived through the “great inflation”• Have experienced periods of transition, such as
unemployment, downsizing, globalization• Likelihood of good pensions, assets, or at least a social
safety net pension • Possibility of early retirement
• Increasingly risk averse• Relatively less mobile – want to stay settled or move to
retirement destination, often breaking ties with community in which employed
• Increasing awareness of need for skills and education demanded in tech/globally competitive economy (attitudes of younger and early core age groups)
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Selected Scenarios of the Potential Effects of Workforce Aging
• Demographics is useful because of its deterministic nature, but the economic outcomes of demographic trends and factors may be emergent properties or events, and thus less amenable to forecasting
• So, let us look at some “scenarios” for macro effects of an aging population and workforce, which may determine the macro and micro characteristics of our workforce and how those characteristics play out in the economy in the next 5 to 15 years.
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Scenario 1: Inflationary Environment
• Critical factors:More slowly growing workforce The workforce is aging and by 2012 the baby boom
cohorts will be well into retirement mode (assuming no significant changes in attitudes, expectations, labour practices…)
The economy is now and will continue to be increasingly based in technology and knowledge sectors, such that labour market will be tight for sought after, qualified, productivity-capable workers
Immigration will grow as it has been, highly managedLabour productivity will grow only a bit faster than is
has in the past decade
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Scenario 1: Implications
• These conditions set up inflationary expectations or inflation, as the demand for workers is chronically ahead of the supply of skilled, knowledge workers; workers (all of us) have pricing power, offset by price effects and/or decline in real output
• Globalization only partly offsets the upward pressure on wages and salaries
• Central Bank reacts by increasing interest rates but cannot ex post do anything meaningful about the age class structure and “worker capability”
• Inflationary and higher interest rates reduce value of real estate and securities assets – i.e. pensions
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Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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• Workers of all age classes seek higher wages, but this may include through productivity, by acquiring skills and knowledge, if workers internalize this option and there is adequate training and educational capacity
• Older workers, especially baby boomers who remember the inflationary 1970’s and 80’s, react quickly to incipient inflation by becoming more risk averse and a significant number may:
•Return to the active workforce if retired, or• If not already retired, continue working
indefinitely
Scenario 1: How workers (esp. Older Workers) react
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Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Scenario 2: Constrained Economy
• The same critical factors apply as in Scenario 1
• But the potential or actual outcome is one of a constrained or, WCS, prolonged slowed growth, even recession
• The rate of economic growth is constrained because there are chronic shortages of skilled and knowledge workers! (Sound familiar already) needed even for (or because of) a highly technological, service economy; capital can only go so far as a substitute
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
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Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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• These conditions set up recessionary expectations, as firms hold off on expansion investments because they can’t get enough capable workers
• Globalization makes it worse because Canadians have vacated the “low wage” industries, that production having long gone to other nations
• Central Bank reacts by lowering interest rates but cannot ex post do anything meaningful about the age class structure and “worker capability”
• Slow or no growth reduces value of real estate and securities assets – i.e. pensions
Scenario 2: Implications
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Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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• Workers of all age classes have moderate wage demands but those in the know – mostly younger workers, compete aggressively for training and education to gain advantage, (again assuming workers internalize this option – role for LMI)
• Workers without the sought-after skills and knowledge form a new cohort of chronically unemployed
• Older workers, especially baby boomers who have no experience with prolonged slow and no growth (the GD) react slowly; they would like to:
• Return to the active workforce if retired, or• If not already retired, continue working
indefinitely• But many don’t have the appropriate skills and education• They also don’t know how to adjust to lower expectations
Scenario 2: How workers (esp. Older Workers) react
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Labour Productivity Canada and Provinces
Labour Productivity (Real $1997)
Re
al
19
97
$s
GD
P /
Ho
ur
Wo
rke
d
1996 1997 1997 1999 2000 2001
Source: Centre for Studies in Living Standards
2002 2003 2004 2005
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Scenario “X” - Synthesis
• Is there an intermediate path of economic response to the aging workforce? Would such a path occur spontaneously?
• Well, many of us, as individuals and as a society generally like to think we have some degree of control over our future and people who attend meetings like the LMI Forum would seem to be “positists” – we work to find ways to solve problems or guide development
• So, Scenario “X” is the synthetic process, to which we make inputs of public policy and private endeavors
• Are there some workforce development management priorities to achieve the synthetic outcomes?
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Managing the Workforce for Economic Growth, Price Stability, and Productivity
• Nyce and Schieber, in their book The Economic Implications of Aging Societies (2005), discuss the challenges for developed economies of not having enough workers to satisfy consumer demand for goods and services over the next couple of decades. They say that there are two solutions (with which we are well familiar):Rising productivityHigher participation rates of workers, including
older workers• Others have also suggested increased “work
intensity” (a reversal of a long term trend to shorter work weeks)
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Education, Education, Education – and Other Stuff
• We accept that education and skills translate into productivity and higher incomes over time
• A more productive Canadian workforce needs education at many levels, from literacy to trades skills to management techniques to post Doc research
• An aging workforce in the context of an increasingly technological economy is likely to be more needful of education, broadly defined
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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The Potential of Older Workers
• Attitudes about older workers, including those held by some older workers and some older people, are shaped by socio-economic beliefs and experiences; these attitudes concern:
• Performance ability in the workplace (intellectual, physical (incl. health), and socio-economic)
• The “normal” life cycle of work toward retirement
• Expectations for retirement income
• Attitudes can create self-fulfilling outcomes
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Older Workers:They’re Getting More Important
Older Worker Age Classes in Labour Market Population CanadaX 1,000
Projections
Age Classes 2005 2011 2021
Total 15-64 22,367.3 23,604.9 24,181.1
Older 55-64 3,526.2 4,355.3 5,220.6
Older % of Total 15.8% 18.5% 21.6%
Total 15-69 23,560.8 25,118.0 26,365.8
Older 55-69 4,719.7 5,868.4 7,405.3
Older % of Total 20.5% 23.4% 28.1%
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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The Potential of Older Workers
• Older workers can be one solution to our workforce development challenges, if society, our economy, and of course older workers themselves want to make it so
• There are a number of approaches to enticing older workers to remain in the workforce or return to the workforce, but the conditions which would bring this about are likely to include a change in attitudes
• That change in attitudes includes engendering a more widely held belief that workers including older people can efficiently upgrade their knowledge and education, and transition to a longer work life or more intensive work life.
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
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Challenge : Achieving Worker Capability Levels in an Efficient Way for the Economy
• A challenge for governments, firms and individuals is to achieve workforce development efficiently
• This might be measured in terms of achieving “worker capability”, a mix of skills, education, and socio-economic characteristics
• Efficiency criteria may include: • Minimizing the externalities of inadequate worker
capability• Equalizing the marginal cost of achieving worker
capability across age classes and within age classes• Enabling workers to participate at their optimum
productivity - such as by facilitating skills and knowledge acquisition
• In the case of older workers, finding ways for employers and employees to reach accommodations reflecting the characteristics and preferences of older workers
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
32
Central Role for Labour Market Information
• Throughout my talk I have alluded to the role of LMI:
• LMI is essential to the efficient operation of markets – perfect knowledge of market participants often assumed – but in reality there are costs, so we must allocate
• LMI can function to increase awareness of the nature of the aging workforce – the implications for workers in all age classes, and for the evolution of the economy
• LMI has a central role in building worker capability, particularly among older workers
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
33
Revisiting Questions
• Is there a rationale for developing pro-active policies and programs to adjust to an aging workforce? (Or leave to the market?)
• Can we foster an efficient transition?
• Is there a special role for Labour Market information?
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
FLMM Labour Market Information Forum 2007
Aging Workforce Culture and Market Solutions
34