Do discriminatory attitudes to older workers at work affect their retirement intentions?

被引:3
|
作者
Messe, Pierre-Jean [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maine, GAINS TEPP, Pres UNAM, UFR Droit, F-72017 Le Mans, France
关键词
Retirement; Age discrimination; Employees behaviour; Retirement intentions; Delayed-payment contracts; Gender differences; BRIDGE EMPLOYMENT; AGE; ADJUSTMENT; DETERMINANTS; ANTECEDENTS; PREDICTORS; GENDER; HEALTH; LIFE;
D O I
10.1108/01437721211243769
中图分类号
F24 [劳动经济];
学科分类号
020106 ; 020207 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to investigate whether employers' attitudes towards older workers, especially regarding promotions, really affect their retirement intentions, distinguishing between men and women. Design/methodology/approach - First, the author uses the 1992 wave of the Health and Retirement Study to estimate, through a Fields decomposition, the relative contribution of the feeling of an older worker to be discriminated against regarding promotions; and to explain the self-reported probability to work full time after 62, decomposing by gender. Second, using the two first waves of HRS, the author removes any bias due to time-constant unobserved heterogeneity, to test whether the individual feeling of being passed over for promotion may be misreported, owing to a strong preference for leisure. Finally, the author examines the effect of a change in this variable over time on the intentions to exit early. Findings - The Fields decomposition shows that feeling passed over for promotion plays a non-negligible role to predict retirement plans but only for women. hi addition, using panel data allows a misreporting bias to be exhibited that may lead to underestimating of the negative effect of discriminatory practices towards older workers on their retirement plans. Lastly, an increase between 1992 and 1994 in the age-discrimination towards older workers encouraged women to leave their job early, while it had no effect on retirement plans of men. Practical implications - Empirical results put forward the idea that retirement intentions may differ across gender, owing to the different nature of the employer-employee relation. While for men, this relation is characterized by delayed-payment arrangements signed ex ante with the employer, as already shown by Adams, it is not true for women. Consequently, the age-based preference of employers for promotion, leading to a lower probability of promotion for older workers, is treated by men as a consequence of ex ante arrangements and does not affect their retirement plans. However, women can attribute such attitudes of their employer to a kind of blatant discrimination, reducing therefore their attachment to their job. Originality/value - The paper presents a longitudinal approach towards the determinants of retirement intentions that allows the unobserved heterogeneity constant over time to be removed and to estimate to what extent the feeling of being passed over for promotion may be attributed, for each gender, to some arrangements signed ex ante with the employer.
引用
收藏
页码:405 / 423
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] HOW DO OLDER HEALTHCARE WORKERS' PREFERENCES FOR FLEXIBILITY AFFECT WORK AND RETIREMENT DECISIONS?
    Cahill, K. E.
    James, J. B.
    Pitt-Catsouphes, M.
    [J]. GERONTOLOGIST, 2013, 53 : 291 - 291
  • [2] PREDICTING THE RETIREMENT INTENTIONS AND ATTITUDES OF PROFESSIONAL WORKERS
    KILTY, KM
    BEHLING, JH
    [J]. JOURNALS OF GERONTOLOGY, 1985, 40 (02): : 219 - 227
  • [3] THE MEANING OF WORK AND ATTITUDES TOWARD RETIREMENT OF OLDER WORKERS IN RETAIL TRADE
    BOWER, J
    [J]. JOURNALS OF GERONTOLOGY, 1952, 7 (03): : 475 - 475
  • [4] Work, More Work and Retirement: Older Workers' Perspectives
    Loretto, Wendy
    White, Phil
    [J]. SOCIAL POLICY AND SOCIETY, 2006, 5 (04) : 495 - 506
  • [5] Retirement intentions of older migrant workers: does health matter?
    Vaillant, Nicolas Gerard
    Wolff, Francois-Charles
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER, 2012, 33 (04) : 441 - 460
  • [6] The impact of work-related and personal resources on older workers' fatigue, work enjoyment and retirement intentions over time
    Stynen, Dave
    Jansen, Nicole W. H.
    Kant, IJmert
    [J]. ERGONOMICS, 2017, 60 (12) : 1692 - 1707
  • [7] OLDER WORKERS ATTITUDES TO AGE: IMPACTS ON RETIREMENT PLANNING
    Vickerstaff, S. A.
    [J]. GERONTOLOGIST, 2011, 51 : 13 - 13
  • [8] The association between psychosocial work environment, attitudes towards older workers (ageism) and planned retirement
    Sannie Thorsen
    Reiner Rugulies
    Katja Løngaard
    Vilhelm Borg
    Karsten Thielen
    Jakob Bue Bjorner
    [J]. International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, 2012, 85 : 437 - 445
  • [9] The association between psychosocial work environment, attitudes towards older workers (ageism) and planned retirement
    Thorsen, Sannie
    Rugulies, Reiner
    Longaard, Katja
    Borg, Vilhelm
    Thielen, Karsten
    Bjorner, Jakob Bue
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL ARCHIVES OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, 2012, 85 (04) : 437 - 445
  • [10] Early retirement and bridge employment intentions among older workers in Singapore
    Soon L.G.
    Tin N.L.
    [J]. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 1997, 14 (2) : 185 - 209