|
Discrimination - age
Summary:
- Discrimination on grounds of age became unlawful as from 1st October 2006.
- Age discrimination covers all employees but also workers, partners, applicants etc
and applies to people of all ages. It also covers perceived, not just actual, age.
- The comparison is between persons of the claimant's age group and those not of
the same age group.
- Like other unlawful discrimination, there is no maximum award of compensation.
- Employers may discriminate where justified (eg young actor for teenage boy role
in a play, or where the person is within six months of the normal retirement age).
- Positive action is allowed to encourage access to training and to take up
employment opportunities.
- Age discrimination covers recruitment, training, benefits, terms and conditions of
employment, performance management, disciplinary action and dismissal.
Service related pay and benefits which accrue after five years' employment
must be properly justified.
- The previous age limits for statutory payments such as SSP, SMP, SAP, SPP,
unfair dismissal and statutory redundancy payments have been removed, although the
different rates for the National Minimum Wage remain, and statutory
redundancy payments still increase with age.
- The regulations retain a default retirement age of 65, but introduce a new standard
minimum procedure for retirement and a right for workers to request to work
beyond their normal retirement age.
Introduction
Employers who discriminate on grounds of age are breaking the law. The
Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006, which took effect on 1 October 2006,
apply to all UK employers and outlaw discrimination against workers (ie not
just employees, but also agency workers, some self-employed contractors, job
applicants, office holders, people undertaking or applying for employment-related training
or further or higher education courses, and those who are members or who apply to
join trade unions or professional bodies) in relation to either their actual or their
perceived age, for all aspects of employment, including:
- the recruitment process (eg advertising, the interviewing process, the
terms of any offer of employment, refusing employment)
- terms and conditions of employment
- opportunities for promotion, training, transfers or other benefits
- dismissal or any other detrimental treatment in employment (including
redundancy).
Similar to other discrimination legislation, the regulations prohibit direct and
indirect discrimination, harassment and victimisation, however the provision of goods
and services is not covered. Also unlike other discrimination legislation, employers may
justify different treatment on grounds of age - but only where they can show that this
fulfils a legitimate aim and the particular circumstances make this appropriate and
necessary.
Many people believed that the age legislation would have a greater impact than either
sex or race discrimination laws - unsurprisingly perhaps since we are all potentially
affected by it. However, it has now been in force since October 2006, and the Employers
Forum on Age found that 59 per cent of the employees it surveyed claimed to have
witnessed some form of ageist behaviour in the workplace during the past year. They
reported:
- 30 per cent of respondents were aware of an older person getting paid more than
a younger person for doing the same job
- 31 per cent had witnessed people being managed differently depending on their age
- 27 per cent were aware of employers hiring people of a similar age to the rest of
the workforce to ensure they fitted in.
739 age discrimination claims were made between 1 October 2006 and 31 March
2007: whilst this may not seem very many, it is almost the same as the combined
number of sexual orientation and religious discrimination claims filed in the entire first year
after they were introduced.
The first successful case of discrimination on the grounds of being too young was
that of Megan Thomas, aged 20, who was dismissed from her job as a membership
secretary at the Eight Member club in London after her six-month probation period.
The employer denied discrimination, claimed that the reason for the dismissal was
because she had made some mistakes. They pointed out that many waiters and
waitresses at the club were younger than she was, but lost their case. The award is
expected to be about £2000 - a relatively low amount because Megan Thomas
found another, higher paid, job within four days of being dismissed, so is only
compensated for injury to feelings and unpaid notice.
Background facts
- Life expectancy in the UK has increased by more than ten years since 1950.
- By 2021, 23% of the population will be aged over 65.
- The overall population of the UK is ageing, and the relative proportion of those
aged over 65 is increasing. Demographic changes mean that the labour market will
soon contain more people aged over 40 than under 40. Trends indicate a 23.5%
increase in the number of people aged 50 and over and a 4.9% reduction in the
number of people aged 16-24.
- By 2020, young people will comprise only 11 per cent of the workforce, compared
with 16 per cent today - a drop of almost one million.
- The proportion of people aged over 55 still in work has fallen dramatically since
the 1960s. Only around 30% of men aged 60-64 are still in work.
- However, around one million people choose to work beyond state
pension age already and the Government wishes to encourage this further, to
maintain the current ratio of workers to non-workers. It is expected that the
number of people economically active above the pension age of 65 will increase
by almost a third in the next 15 years - from 582,000 in 2005 to 775,000 in 2020.
A survey by Aon Consulting discovered that three-quarters (78%) of employees
now anticipate working beyond the age of 65. Just a quarter of the 1,204
respondents in their survey thought they would do this because they wanted to,
whereas over half (53%) believed it would be necessary to increase their pension.
- The CIPD estimate that age discrimination costs the economy between
£19 and £31 billion a year in lost output. To be successful in
an increasingly competitive market place, organisations need to attract and
retain valuable employees and develop the talents of all their
employees.
- The CIPD and the Institute of Chartered Management also report that age
discrimination persists in many organisations - in a survey undertaken jointly by
both professional bodies, six out of ten respondents said that they had been
personally disadvantaged at work because of their age, and 22% admitted that
age had an impact on their own recruitment decisions.
Age discrimination does not just apply to older workers - it can affect anyone, but
other groups who commonly suffer are women returners and workers who are
discriminated against because it is felt that they are too young.
The business case for removing age discrimination
The business case for removing discrimination on grounds of age is
similar to that for other types of discrimination: ie that employers who limit their
choices by imposing unnecessary and irrelevant restrictions on who they recruit, train or
promote are less likely to find and retain the best person for the job.
- Age is not a genuine employment criterion.
- It is a poor predictor of performance.
- It is misleading to equate physical and mental ability with age.
- Differences in absenteeism between age groups are slight.
Ageism lowers morale, reduces the pool of candidates available to do the job, and
makes bad business sense.
Scope of the Regulations
The new regulations cover "workers" - ie not just employees. They also protect job
applicants, office holders, partners, people undertaking or applying for
employment-related training or further or higher education courses, members and
applicants to trade unions and professional bodies, agency workers, some
self-employed individuals (in relation to those that hire them), and ex-employees.
Unpaid volunteers are not covered by the legislation, unless the unpaid volunteering is
part of a training course - in which case the volunteer is covered (eg unpaid teaching as
part of a teacher training course).
Comparators
The comparison is made between persons of the claimant's "age group" and those
"not of the same age group". There is no definition of what age group may be used,
which will depend on the circumstances and issue in question - however it seems likely
that a broad definition will be used.
Indirect and direct discrimination and harassment
As with other forms of discrimination, both indirect and direct discrimination and
harassment are covered.
- Direct discrimination is treating someone less favourably because of
their age or because of the age they appear to be.
- Indirect age discrimination would include having a policy or practice which
puts people of a certain age at a disadvantage, compared with other people.
- All harassment or victimisation on grounds of age of people of any age, young or
old, is covered. Harassment occurs when there is unwanted conduct with the purpose
or effect of violating the dignity of a person, or creating an intimidating, hostile,
degrading, humiliating or offensive environment.
Justification and "Genuine Occupational Requirements"
Unlike sex and race discrimination, employers are able to treat people differently on
grounds of age where this can both be objectively justified (ie a proportionate means of
achieving a legitimate aim) and where it is appropriate and necessary - this applies to
both direct and indirect discrimination (but not to harassment or victimisation which
are always unlawful and cannot be justified). This will not necessarily be easy - and
sufficient supporting evidence will be needed. The government has indicated that
legitimate aims may include the following, but there is no list in the Regulations
themselves, only examples:
- catering for health, welfare or safety
- facilitating employment planning (eg where an employer has a number of people
approaching retirement age at the same time)
- meeting particular training requirements for a post (eg where the post requires
high levels of health and fitness or concentration)
- encouraging and rewarding staff loyalty
- the need for a reasonable period of employment before retirement, particularly
where the job requires significant training.
Employers may decline to recruit someone who is older than the employer's
normal retirement age (if it is greater than age 65), or, if there is no NRA, age 65.
Regulation 7 also enables an employer to decline to recruit someone who, within 6
months following the date of his/her job application, would be older than this age.
An employer can also discriminate on grounds of age if this is required by law,
eg working in a bar, or needing a road haulage licence (which has an age requirement).
An employer can have a "Genuine Occupational Requirement" if there is a
genuine need for an employee to have a characteristic related to a certain age.
The example usually given is that of an actor playing the role of a person of a
particular age - it is difficult to think of any other examples where this exemption
would apply, and employers are not able to pander to client preferences. Genuine
Occupational Requirements only apply to recruitment, promotion, training and
dismissal and not to contractual terms.
Positive action
Positive action (doing something to prevent or compensate for disadvantages
experienced by people of a certain age group) is allowed in two areas:
- for access to training and education facilities
- to encourage people to take up employment opportunities.
So employers may target their recruitment advertising at certain groups which
are under-represented in the workforce as long as the position itself is open to all ages.
Selection on the basis of age will not however be lawful, unless it can be justified.
Penalties
In line with race, sex, and disability discrimination, compensation is unlimited should
discrimination on the grounds of age be found. Also as with the other forms of
discrimination, there are no qualifying periods. Basic awards are calculated in the same
way as statutory redundancy payments and are amended in the same way (ie
age/length of service calculators retained, but upper age limit removed).
Cases of age discrimination are heard in the employment tribunals, with the
exception of claims against providers of further or higher education which must be
brought in the County Courts in England and Wales, and the Sheriff Courts in Scotland.
Proceedings must be brought within three months of the date of the alleged
discrimination (six months in the County Court). With effect from 6 April 2008
amendments to the age regulations close a loophole in connection with time limits (the
original Regulations did not properly provide for the three month extension of time
under the dispute resolution regulations).
It would seem that tribunals will be prepared to infer discrimination, if the employer
cannot defend its case with consistent, clear and well-documented evidence to the
contrary. An example is Wilkinson v Springwell Engineering Limited. In this case,
an 18 year old administrator won more than £16,000 compensation. Miss
Wilkinson was employed as an office administrator. During her probationary period, her
employer decided that she was not performing sufficiently well and she was therefore
told that her performance must improve over the following few months. Another, older,
office administrator was asked to assist with her work load. After two months'
employment, Miss Wilkinson was dismissed and she alleged that her line manager said
that this was because she was too young for the job. Her claim was successful as the
employer failed to provide evidence that she lacked capability to do the job satisfactorily.
The tribunal stated that Springwell had relied on a "stereotypical" assumption that
capability equals experience and experience equals older age.
Awards in age claims may be high for older workers because of the difficulty in
obtaining alternative employment - also there may be a greater number of claims
because older workers may be less concerned about the long-term career implications
of bringing a tribunal claim.
Complying with the regulations
In order to comply with the regulations, we recommend the following actions:
-
Review your policies
Equal opportunities policies and practices should include a commitment to
remove arbitrary age discrimination and promote the adoption of job-related
criteria for all employment decisions.
Diversity and bullying/harassment policies should also be reviewed and
updated, and refer to both direct and indirect age discrimination.
A "health-check" of all employment policies is recommended - including
recruitment, training, promotion, benefits, retirement, redundancy etc to
eliminate all unjustifiable age discrimination.
Change any blanket policies that have an age element, and instead,
consider every situation on its own merits. Consider each employee on an
individual basis, and determine whether there is any risk.
Consider whether you have any policies which, seemingly innocent, may
unintentionally affect any particular age group. Think like an outsider - how would
your policies appear to an objective third party?
If you find potential discrimination, is this there for a legitimate need, and is
the impact of the policy proportionate to the perceived need?
-
Recruitment
Use properly written job and person specifications prior to any recruitment
activity to ensure that you focus on the requirements of the post concerned and
the skills necessary to undertake this.
Check that any experience required in your person specifications is justified.
If you have tended to include "xx years' experience of ..." then do consider this seriously -
such time serving requirements may not necessarily tell you the depth or range of
experience, some people can gain huge experience in a very short time whilst
others may take longer - you could be indirectly discriminating against younger people.
Also asking for a driver with 5 years' experience actually excludes anyone under
the age of 22 and is therefore indirectly discriminatory so you would have to be
able to justify this.
Consider the roles for which you commonly require health checks and ensure
that you do not apply these checks to individuals over a certain age, but to all
applicants. Consider also the qualifications you are looking for - "French GCSE"
could be indirectly discriminatory against those who have other qualifications such
as "O" levels or "CSE"s - perhaps what you need is "ability to speak basic French".
Equally do you need a graduate - or someone of "graduate calibre"? Requirements
for "modern" degrees, such as media studies and information technology should
be reconsidered, as should your requirements for a "recent graduate" or
"newly-qualified" person.
Age, age-related criteria or age ranges should not be used in adverts (including
graduate recruitment activities) other than to encourage applications from age
groups who may be under-represented in your business. Where this is the case,
it should be clearly stated. Use positive imagery and language to appeal to the
widest of age groups: not only is it advisable to avoid words like "young" and
"mature", but ageist language such as "funky" or "energetic" or "dynamic" should
be avoided. (Older candidates can of course be energetic and dynamic, and who
wants to appoint candidates lacking energy or dynamism anyway?) Other
examples include the words "ambitious", "hungry", "vibrant", "gravitas",
"youthful", "quick-learner", "self-starter", and "high-flyer".
The common wording "salary according to age and experience" could be
indirectly discriminatory. Asking for "school leavers" is likely to put off older
applicants.
The purpose of job advertisements is to attract the best qualified candidates:
it does not therefore make good business sense to deliberately exclude suitably
qualified candidates on the basis of their age. Talk to employees of different ages
about the content of your job adverts and find out what would attract or appeal to
them.Find out what they think are the key benefits of working for you.
Place your job adverts in different places, for example local media or specialist
publications or newsletters, to ensure they reach different age groups and audiences.
Advertise a vacancy openly - don't simply rely on internal recruitment, word of
mouth, or recommendations of friends and relatives of your current employees.
Limiting your vacancies limits your chances of getting the right person for the job.
Ensure special recruitment programmes, like those for graduates or managers,
are open to all ages. Also bear in mind that far more people graduate nowadays
than 20 years' ago - do you really need graduates or do you need someone of a
particular level of capability? Asking for "recent graduates" puts older candidates
at a disadvantage - do you really just want "someone with up to date skills"? and
if your recruitment of graduates is normally restricted to the "milk round" it would
be advisable to consider using a broader recruitment strategy.
Don't just consider the language but look at visual imagery too. Adverts
portraying only people of certain age groups should be avoided.
Similar to other forms of equal opportunities monitoring, it is advisable to state
on application forms that age will not be taken into account in
employment decisions, but used only for monitoring purposes. We recommend
that you do not ask for age or date of birth on your application forms (nor
unnecessary employment history), but instead put age or date of birth on the
equal opportunities information form alongside other monitoring information. This
information should be requested in a "tear-off" slip which is removed during the
shortlisting and interviewing process. Monitor how many people from different age
groups apply - you can then see if your adverts are attracting different age groups
and audiences.
Ask applicants for information that will show you they can do the
job - be clear about what the job entails and what the key duties are.
Avoid setting restrictive standards not just for experience, but also for personal
qualities. Always consider if they are necessary. Often qualifications
or specific experience is requested because "that's the way it's always
been", not because they are necessary for the job. If you need to ask
about qualifications, make sure they are relevant for the job. Consider whether to
move away from the traditional cv with its chronological ordering of jobs towards a
skills-based application form which removes all direct and indirect reference to age
and which requires candidates to submit situations from their past work,
educational or other experience to demonstrate competencies.
Do look carefully at your selection criteria. Age discrimination is
particularly rife in customer-facing roles and blue collar jobs where physical
fitness is a requirement. However, youthfulness is not necessarily linked
to attractiveness or energy levels or ability.
Never use equal opportunities information as part of your selection
process. This is supplied by candidates for monitoring purposes only.
Always assess candidates on their ability to do the job, relevant
knowledge and experience and personal qualities, not their age. If it's
available to you, psychometric testing is an objective way of assessing
candidates. Apply selection criteria fairly and consistently across all
applicants.
Interviewers should be aware that prejudices and stereotypical views
are often incorrect and be trained to disregard these. Train all staff
responsible for selecting and interviewing in equal opportunities, as
without this knowledge they may discriminate unwittingly and leave
you open to a claim. Break down prejudices by using employees of
different ages in the recruitment process and wherever possible use a
mixed age interview panel. If you use a recruitment agency, make sure
you check that they use age-diverse principles and practices.
At interview, ask questions related to the job rather than ones about personal
circumstances. It is useful to agree questions beforehand based on your
person specification and job profile. Make sure your decisions are
objective - do not base your decisions on prejudice, stereotypes or age
bias.
Use age profiling to monitor the selection process at short-listing, interview
and appointment to ensure you have been fair.
Many employers have already taken positive action to attract older workers,
so consider doing the same - but be careful not to discriminate against younger
workers in the process! Positive action to correct an age imbalance in the
workforce is acceptable.
-
Medical advice
Judgements should not be made about someone's abilities or fitness on
grounds of their age, but an occupational health or medical practitioner should be
asked to give a judgement on ability to do the role in question, if necessary.
Policies requiring workers over a certain age to undergo physical testing are
discriminatory. Rigorous physical testing is still possible where there are health and
safety considerations, but arbitrary cut-off ages are not allowed.
Many studies show that workers of all ages are on average equally effective
in their work and that absenteeism varies very little between the groups.
-
Fixed-term contracts
Reduced duration fixed-term contracts should not be used for employees
over a certain age, as unjustifiably treating someone less favourably than another
person on the grounds of their age will amount to direct discrimination.
Employers could try to argue that this is legitimate and proportionate - firstly
on the grounds that older employees, particularly in more physical roles, tend to
be more injury prone and possibly do not perform so well. But whilst this may be
generally true, some younger employees may be more prone to injury than their
older colleagues. Any employer will face difficulties in showing that a blanket
policy which does not take individual circumstances into account is "proportionate".
(An offer of a shorter contract may well be justifiable however if it takes into
account a recent injury record, or concerns raised by a medical examination or
fitness test.)
-
Statutory payments
The previous age limits for Statutory Sick Pay, Statutory Maternity Pay,
Statutory Adoption Pay, and Statutory Paternity Pay were removed so that
the legislation for all four statutory payments applies in exactly the same way to all.
- The lower age limit for SMP was removed for employees with an expected
week of confinement on or after 14 January 2007.
- Under 16s qualify for SSP from 1st October 2006.
- For over 65s, SSP is payable from 1st October 2006.
- National Insurance payments still start at 16, and employee contributions stop
at 65 for men and 60 for women.
Ensure that any contractual sick or maternity pay schemes don't differentiate
on grounds of age.
The age banding for the National Minimum Wage (NMW) continues.
BERR defends this on the grounds that the minimum wage is an area where
discrimination could be objectively justified in order to prevent employers from
laying off younger workers.
Employers may continue to pay less to workers under the age of 22, provided
that their pay differentials mirror the NMW. This exemption only applies where the
NMW age bands are used (ie 16 and 17; 18-21 and 22 and over) and where the
workers under the age of 22 are paid less than the adult NMW. The NMW
exemption is therefore of no assistance to employers who pay all workers in
excess of the adult NMW rate. For those employers, any pay differentials based
on age will only be lawful if they can be objectively justified as a proportionate
means of achieving a legitimate aim.
The lower and upper age limits in the statutory redundancy scheme were
also removed (see below).
-
Service related pay and benefits
Pay and terms of employment should not be based on age-related criteria,
but should reflect the value of individual contributions and standards of performance.
Salary scales with annual increments will become increasingly less common.
Instead incremental steps linked directly to the attainment of additional
skills/competencies, or to performance standards will become more common.
Increases in pay and benefits which are age-related are prohibited, but those
which reward length of service of up to five years (typically extra holiday or
additional sick pay) are allowed without the need for justification. Also benefits
which have length-of -service requirements which mirror a similar requirement in a
statutory benefit (eg redundancy, paternity leave, etc) are exempted and
enhanced provisions for employees (which may include shorter timescales to
become eligible for the benefit) are also acceptable.
"Five years' service" can either be the length of time the individual has
worked at or above a particular level, or the length of time the employee has
been working for that employer in total. So increases related to a particular
grading can be dated from the date of promotion etc. Service is calculated in
whole weeks (not hours as this would disadvantage part-time workers). Ensure that
you clearly specify how such benefits will be granted. The regulations also allow
absences to be discounted from the calculation but this is where it becomes unclear -
they do not specify to what extent sickness/disability should be discounted.
For a benefit which covers length of service longer than five years,
additional steps need to be taken and it must "reasonably appear to the employer
that the way in which he uses the criterion of length of service" in relation to the
benefit concerned "fulfils a business need of his undertaking". The
examples given are encouraging loyalty or motivation, or rewarding experience of
some or all workers. So if you have benefits which only accrue after five years,
you will need to identify a business benefit, gather supporting evidence and
record this - just in case it is challenged! Supporting evidence could include
information about recruitment and retention, assessment of relative efficiency of staff
with different levels of service, discussions with the union or consultation committee,
or evidence from staff surveys.
An equal pay case provides some idea of the sorts of arguments which may
be relevant when justifying any length of service criteria which extend beyond
five years.
In Cadman v Health and Safety Executive, Mrs Cadman was paid
less than four male colleagues who were all on the same grade, but had longer
service. The Court of Appeal sought advice from the European Court of Justice on
this, due to concerns re indirect discrimination against women. In this case, the
advice was that employers should provide objective justification for such criterion,
and show that they are an appropriate means of achieving a legitimate aim (eg
to reward experience or loyalty). But it is also essential that such aims are
implemented proportionately. So thought should be given to minimising any
indirect discrimination against women - eg by guaranteeing that periods of
maternity leave count towards length of service. The "legitimate aim" should
also properly reflect the actual jobs - for example, experience may be far more
valuable in managerial jobs than in more repetitive manual positions. There should
be no distinction between the length of service criterion when comparing
part-time and full-time workers.
Some benefits are more expensive for older workers - eg higher
insurance premiums for health insurance, death in service benefits and ill-health
pensions. Cost alone is not an acceptable reason for withdrawing a benefit from
these workers. Employers who offer set benefits to all staff need to ask
themselves "is this benefit age-neutral and can everyone access it?" Age banding
(for benefits) would constitute direct discrimination. Life assurance cover for
workers who are retired can however cease on early medical retirement or at age 65.
With flexible benefits schemes, care needs to be taken with older employees,
whose benefits may cost more. In the first case to deal with this, Swann v
GHL Insurance Services UK Limited, GHL Insurance Services was found not to
have discriminated unlawfully. Its scheme gave employees a fixed 'flex-fund'. The
fund was a percentage of basic salary used to "buy" a range of benefits which
included private medical insurance (PMI), additional pension contributions, life
assurance, critical illness cover, childcare vouchers, dental insurance, travel insurance,
gym membership and payroll giving. Older individuals who wanted to take out the
private medical insurance had to pay more out of their fund than younger employees:
an employee, Mrs Swann, therefore brought a claim for age discrimination on the
basis that the premiums for the PMI element of the flex package were age-related
and therefore more costly for her than for a younger employee. The tribunal decided
that since the calculation of the flex fund was age-neutral, Mrs Swann had not
been treated any less favourably than younger employees.
But they also - unusually - took the arguments one stage further, and considered
what the outcome would be if they were wrong on this point. The tribunal considered
if so, whether such treatment was justified as a "proportionate means of achieving
a legitimate aim". They accepted that the main aim of the scheme was to enhance
the recruitment/retention of staff; this was a legitimate aim and they also felt the
scheme would achieve that aim. Before introducing it, the company had considered
the views of its employees and sought external advice from a management
company experienced in flexible benefits schemes. They had also established the
PMI would be an attractive benefit to staff. The premiums within the PMI scheme
were calculated by reference to actuarial assessments of the risk of an employee
making a claim - all PMI providers calculate premiums based on age-banded tables.
The tribunal noted that, after the first year, the premium would be adjusted to take
into account the actual claim history of an individual employee and that the same
discounts were available to all employees regardless of age. Two of the three
tribunal members therefore felt that the company would have been able to justify
any age discrimination in the scheme.
So do check for service requirements for access to benefits, minimum and
maximum entry ages, age-related benefit levels, benefit ceasing ages, and age-related
flexible benefits rates.
-
Training and development
Particular age groups should not be automatically excluded from training
and development programmes. Research shows that participation in work-related
learning drops sharply once employees reach their 50s: 31% of 35-44 year-olds
receive training, just under 30% of those aged 45-54 do, 23% of 55-59 year-olds,
but only 14.6% of those aged 60-64 receive any training.
Any in-house training programme or training provided by contractors - whatever
their size or sector - should adhere to the anti-ageism regulations. This also applies
to all courses offered by universities and other institutions of further or higher
education, as well as private, public or voluntary sector training bodies, and adult
education programmes, and the bodies that confer the qualifications achieved as a
result of that training. Training providers cannot set age limits for entry to training,
unless they can show there is a real need to apply them, or positive action is
necessary to give people of a particular age access to vocational training - to
prevent or compensate for disadvantages linked to age. Where there are no
formal minimum or maximum age limits, they need to look at whether age is taken
into account when considering applications for admission. An employee seeking
access to, or already on, a vocational training course who feels he/she has been
discriminated against on the grounds of age, may have a case for legal action, either
against the employer or training provider.
To avoid discrimination in assessing suitability for courses, the training provider
should consider its admissions procedures and instead of using age should
look at competencies or abilities. Requiring all applicants to sit an aptitude test and
awarding places based on these results would not contravene the regulations.
Despite the old saying, with equal training and development opportunities,
older people are just as capable of learning new tricks! Traditional reluctance to
train older workers should be countered by the fact that older workers tend to
change jobs less frequently than young employees and correspondingly offer good
potential return on employment and training investment. Since most skills have
a three-five year shelf-life, it is worth investing in someone likely to stay at least
that long.
Be flexible with training methods, venues and times - everyone's needs
and learning styles are different.
Encourage mentoring in the workplace - both younger and older workers can
help develop others through their knowledge, skills and expertise.
Also ensure that all staff, particularly those making recruitment,
promotion and management development decisions, are trained about the
business and HR implications of age discrimination. Ensure that your
managers are trained and equipped to conduct appraisals and manage performance
and absence without bringing any prejudices into play, that managers who make
discretionary decisions base these on objective evidence, and also that all
managers realise that ageist jokes and banter may constitute harassment and
cause offence. Some commentators have even suggested that the sending of
"ageist" birthday cards could amount to harassment.
-
Performance management
In order to manage those employees who wish to continue working, but
whose performance has slipped over the years, employers need to ensure that
they have an effective performance management scheme in place. Many do not
like to dismiss older (and loyal) staff, who are no longer performing to a
satisfactory standard - and many also shy away from broaching this at all.
Do check that your performance management practices are watertight -
and that the same standards of performance are required regardless of the age
of the employee, and that proper feedback, training and counselling is provided at
all levels and all ages.
Check that any performance appraisal criteria are not age related, but reflect
competencies. Ensure that managers do not inadvertently use discriminatory
terms - even where praising staff - eg "does well for his age" or "shows remarkable
maturity for her age".
-
Dismissal, including redundancy
In redundancy situations, decisions on whom to select should be based on
objective, job-related criteria rather than age. The business' need
for knowledge, skills and competencies should be taken into account. "Last in,
first out" may be indirectly discriminatory - since those who go first may be the
younger members of the workforce. See our guide to redundancy .
Employees aged 65 and over have the same unfair dismissal and
redundancy payment rights as younger workers. The age multiplier used to
calculate statutory redundancy payments remains, as do the two year service
requirement, the 20 year service maximum and the statutory cap on a week's pay.
The previous upper and lower age limits (65 and 18) were removed, as was the
previous tapering from age 64.
Employers who have a contractual policy which enhances the statutory
provision need to remove any age criteria unless these mirror exactly the
statutory weightings. Redundancy schemes that offer enhanced versions of the
statutory redundancy scheme other than the permitted ones (see below) are
unlawful, unless they can be objectively justified. This means that if an employer's
redundancy scheme does not use exactly the same age bands and multipliers as
the statutory scheme, it could be held to be discriminatory unless it can be
objectively justified.
The permitted enhancements are any or all of the following:
- not applying the cap on a week's pay
- multiplying the amount produced by the statutory calculation by a factor
- increasing the number of weeks' pay for each year of service.
So enhanced payment schemes such as "a week's pay (uncapped) for each
year of service" or "a month's pay for each year of service" do not comply since
these do not reflect the age bands and multipliers of the statutory scheme.
Similarly schemes which use different age multiples will not comply, and are
unlawful unless such schemes can be "objectively justified". Alan Johnson,
a previous Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, commented: "Objective
justification is a tough test. Employers will need to show that any age-based
measure they take is a proportionate way of achieving a legitimate aim. If the
legitimate aim can be achieved by non-discriminatory means, this must take
precedence. The discriminatory effect of any age-based practice should be
significantly outweighed by the benefits of a legitimate aim."
The choice is to retain an enhanced scheme which may be challenged, or
adapt the scheme to ensure it mirrors the state's age multiples (which may
increase your payments for older employees and reduce them for younger ones -
thus leading to problems) or consult and remove the scheme altogether -
but again if this is a contractual right this is not easy to do!
-
Statutory retirement age
The age of 65 - at least until 2011 - remains the default retirement age for
employees (this does not apply to office holders or partners). It will not constitute
age discrimination to retire employees at or above the age of 65 where it is a
genuine retirement.
Retirement ages below 65 is only allowed if they can be shown to be
"appropriate and necessary". This does not impact the age at which people can
collect their state pension.
The government is monitoring the retirement age provisions and will formally
review this in 2011. In the meantime, in December 2006 the High Court heard a claim
from Heyday (an organisation backed by Age Concern) that the age discrimination
legislation contravenes the European equal rights legislation. Heyday complained
of the default retirement age, and also felt that the ability to discriminate on
grounds of age, provided that this can be justified, gives employers more freedom
to discriminate than is allowed by the European Directive. The High Court decided
to refer the case to the European Court of Justice (ECJ).
In a Spanish case which went to the European Court of Justice (Palacios v
Cortefiel Servicios SA), the ECJ decided that European equal treatment legislation
does not overrule national laws allowing compulsory retirement if the national
legislation is a "proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim". The Spanish
government had introduced the compulsory retirement law at a time of high
unemployment as part of a national policy to promote better access to employment -
basically it was felt that older workers should move aside to make room for the
young. The ECJ thought that the promotion of full employment was a legitimate aim.
There is no guarantee that the outcome of the UK case will be the same as
the Spanish one, and in order to defend its own position, the UK government will
have to be able to show that our law is similarly justified. Our retirement age was
intended to meet the concerns of employers in relation to workforce planning and
avoiding an adverse impact on the provision of occupational pensions and other
work-related benefits. One aspect of 'workforce planning' was to avoid the blocking
of jobs. However, in contrast to the approach of the Spanish government, the
main concern in the UK appears to have been with enabling organisations to
manage their businesses effectively rather than deal with the problem of high
unemployment.
If the ECJ rules against the Government then we could see a ban on the default
retirement age and UK age discrimination law will have to change. Employers in
the public sector now face particular problems. Public sector organisations are
usually regarded as an "emanation of the state", and treated as legally bound to
comply with European Directives. This means that public sector employees may
be able to claim compensation if a public sector employer breaches a
Directive, even though the employer's actions seem to comply with the UK regulations.
This would leave public sector employers potentially facing thousands of backdated
claims for age discrimination if the ECJ rules against the government. Although private
sector employers do not share the same risk, if the ECJ finds against the Government
all UK employers may be forced to relinquish their fixed retirement ages.
A decision in the Heyday case is not expected until 2009 - as it may need
two visits to the European Court of Justice (ECJ) before going back to the High
Court to decide the key issue of whether UK law is justified. And the High Court
may refer the case back to the ECJ for further guidance! In the meantime, the
EAT has decided that an existing claim - Johns v Solent SD Limited -
should be "stayed" (put on hold) until the outcome of the Heyday case is known.
Following this, the President of the Employment Tribunals has directed that all
similar cases should also be stayed. This affects claims that have already been
lodged as well as future ones. The direction only affects claims brought in England
or Wales; we understand that Scottish cases will be referred to chairmen for
individual decisions.
However, all employees now have the right to request to work beyond
the age of 65 (or normal retirement date). Employers are obliged to
inform their employees of this right, and to properly consider any such
requests. The CBI reports that almost three-quarters of employee requests to
continue working beyond retirement age have been granted - so maybe this aspect
of the age regulations is not such an issue after all.
-
Procedure for retirement
A set procedure - see below - applies to dismissals on grounds of retirement,
and failure to comply with this could lead to claims of unfair dismissal (if the
claimant argues successfully that the real reason for dismissal is not retirement)
and/ or a penalty of eight weeks' pay (subject to the statutory weekly pay cap).
Ensure that your payroll department is able to give you reports on who is due to
retire and that you have in place a system which prompts you to provide the
appropriate letters. Special transitional provisions applied to
employees who were due to retire before April 2007.
Employers are required to give written notification to employees at least
six months (but not more than 12 months) in advance of their intended
retirement date, in order to allow them to plan for their retirement. The
three-stage statutory dismissal procedure does NOT apply to retirement dismissals
at age 65, only the duty to consider working beyond the retirement age.
Employers are required to notify employees of their right to request to work
beyond the normal retirement age, and are then obliged to consider any such
requests.
- Provided the employer has complied with the duty to notify the
employee of the intended retirement date, an employee's request can be
made between three - six months before the notified date of retirement.
(If the employer fails to comply with the duty to notify, the employee can make
the request from six months before the intended date of retirement right up to
the intended date of retirement.) The employee's request must be in writing
and must state that it is made under paragraph 5 of Schedule 6 of the
Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006. It must also say how long he/she
proposes the employment should continue, ie indefinitely, for a specified period,
or until a stated date.
- unless the employer simply agrees to the request, the employer must hold
a meeting with the employee to discuss it. The employee has the right to be
accompanied at this meeting by a fellow worker. This meeting must be held
within a reasonable period unless it is not reasonably practicable to do so.
If it is not "reasonably practicable" to hold the meeting, the employer may
consider the request without the meeting provided he considers any
representations made by the employee.
- the employer must notify the employee of the decision as soon as
reasonably practicable. Employment will continue until this has been done, even
if it is after the notified date of retirement.
- if the request is refused, or the employer agrees to extend employment for
a shorter period that requested, the employer must confirm in writing the date
upon which the retirement will take place, and inform the employee of the
appeal procedure.
- The employee has the right of appeal. Any appeal must be made as soon
as reasonably practicable after receipt of the decision being notified to him/her.
The notice of appeal must set out the grounds of appeal, be in writing and be dated.
- An appeal meeting must be held "as soon as reasonably practicable".
The outcome of the appeal should be confirmed in writing, again as soon as
reasonably practicable. Whilst a request to work beyond retirement age may
extend employment beyond the planned retirement date, an appeal hearing
will not do so, and can take place after retirement has taken effect.
- If the employer agrees to an extension of employment, there is no need to
give notice or follow the "duty to consider" procedure unless the
new date is more than six months after the original proposed retirement date.
If the new date is more than six months after the original proposed retirement
date, then the procedure will have to be followed again.
It is worth deciding, in advance of receiving any requests, the circumstances in
which you would agree to extensions beyond retirement age. Employees who are
retained should be employed on no less favourable terms that those before retirement age.
Unlike the flexible working scheme there is no statutory list of grounds on which
such a request can be refused, and the employer is not obliged to give any reasons for
rejecting a request to continue working. (In practice, we suspect that most employers
will choose to give a reason in order to try to resolve the problem and explain their
reasoning - otherwise the employee is less likely to accept the decision and is more
likely to appeal.) Unlike the Flexible Working Regulations, a tribunal does not have the
power to order an employer to reconsider a request.
Provided any dismissal is wholly or mainly by reason of retirement and the
employer follows the retirement procedures and the retirement is at or above 65 (or
any higher normal retirement age in that employment), then the dismissal will be fair.
Research shows that many employees coming up to retirement would welcome the
opportunity of shorter hours, part-time or flexible working, consultancy, secondments
and employment breaks, and to work beyond the normal retirement age. So do
consider the advantages of using retirees as mentors to pass on experience and
develop other employees through use of their knowledge and expertise. Our guide
considers all aspects of how you manage retirement .
Note that the default retirement provisions apply to employees - but the
regulations cover non-employees such as non-executive company directors.
The maximum age for directors of PLCs, which was 70, was removed from 6th April 2007.
(However, as from October 2008 there will be a minimum age of 16 for directors.)
- Pensions
The age at which the state pension may be claimed remains 65 - although the
government has already announced plans to encourage employees to delay their
retirement - by offering a lump sum of £30K to those who delay their state
pension to 70 rather than 65. Changes have also been made to the UK's pensions
system to allow workers to draw a salary and occupational pension from the same
employer (this was not previously possible).
It is still be lawful to operate two pension schemes, such as a defined benefit
scheme for existing employees and a defined contribution scheme for new staff. Minimum
or maximum ages for admission to a pension scheme are still allowed, and schemes
may still require employees to leave the scheme at say age 60, despite potentially
working beyond this.
Age-related employer contributions may continue if they are aimed at
producing an equal outcome in pension benefits. Setting the level of pension benefits
by reference to years of service may continue, as can setting a maximum number of
years of pensionable service.
Different rates of employer contributions to personal pension schemes are
allowable if they are attributable to differences in remuneration.
Occupational pension schemes are treated differently and the age regulations
contain wide exemptions for them. Schedule 2 of the Employment Equality (Age)
Regulations 2006, which came into force in December 2006, sets out those
age-related aspects of operating occupational pension schemes that continue to be
allowable, without having to be objectively justified by the schemes themselves. Any
age-related practice not covered by Schedule 2 will have to capable of being objectively
justified by the individual scheme.
The list below includes some of the provisions which remain lawful:
- a maximum/minimum age for scheme admission
- the use of age criteria in actuarial calculations
- minimum level of pay for admission to a scheme or for treatment as pensionable
pay (so long as that minimum level is not in excess of the lower earnings limit)
- age related contributions to final salary schemes where the aim is to meet the
cost of the benefits provided
- salary-related contribution rates
- minimum age for entitlement to/payment of scheme benefits
- additional pensionable service awards to those members who retire early on
the grounds of ill-health
- bridging pensions for men between the ages of 60-65
- payment of a reduced spouse's pension on the basis of the difference in age
between the member and spouse
- calculating defined benefits on the basis of pensionable service
- upper limit on pay/length of pensionable service used to calculate benefits
- increases to pension in payment payable only to pensioners aged 55 or over
- closure of the scheme to new members.
Where other age-related pension rules are in existence, and these are not covered
under exemptions, the employer has to be able to objectively justify them. If unable to
do so, they have to be changed or removed.
-
Monitoring
Monitoring should be carried out at regular intervals to find out whether or not
there is any indication of unfair discrimination against particular age groups. Check that
you have age distribution statistics for all employees, applicants and retirees - and that
age is included on your monitoring forms, procedures and any positive action
programmes.
A formal age equality audit is recommended to look in detail, not just at your
written procedures, but also informal practices, and eliminate any areas of either direct
or indirect age-related criteria which can't be properly justified.
Further help
The Age Positive website provides:
- information on the European Equal Treatment Framework Directive and its
implications for the UK
- facts and figures on age
- details of the Code of Practice on Age Diversity
- guidance on good practice
- case studies of companies which have adopted "Age Positive" policies
and
- a list of useful publications and reports.
Further information on the regulations themselves are available on the
BERR website
including a summary guide to the regulations and the full regulations.
Frequently asked questions (FAQs)
Can we still ask candidates how old they are? We do not want to
recruit someone nearing our normal retirement age.
The regulations allow you to refuse to appoint someone over the
normal retirement age or who would reach this within six months.
So it may be hard to refuse to employ someone who is outside of
this time limit - "nearing retirement age" could mean five years!
You could ask candidates to indicate on your application form
whether they are over the normal retirement age or within six
months of reaching it. An alternative is to make it clear on job
adverts and application information that candidates who are within
six months of retirement age will not be considered.
We've always offered fixed-term contracts only to those who work
beyond the normal retirement age. Are we still OK to do this?
Offering a fixed-term contract rather than an indefinite one on
grounds of age to someone who requests to stay on but doesn't
actually request a specified period would be direct discrimination.
Bear in mind also that fixed-term employees have the right not to
be treated less favourably than staff on indefinite contracts, and
after four years they become permanent, so there are few
advantages to this course of action!
We are increasing our normal retirement age to 65. What do we
need to do?
Ensure that you communicate to all of your employees that there
is a new normal retirement date. Otherwise a tribunal could decide,
particularly if those employees currently coming up to your earlier
retirement age decide still to go at that age, that your original
NRA is still in force. In that case, any dismissal, even at age 65 or
over, would be deemed not to be a retirement dismissal!
Increasing your NRA will mean that an individual can still
choose to retire before 65, but you cannot require them to do so.
Do we have to monitor the age profile of our workforce?
You are not legally obliged to do this, however this information will
help you in drafting policies and procedures and will show you
whether any particular age groups are under-represented in your
workforce. And if you receive a discrimination questionnaire, you
may be better prepared to answer this!
If you already monitor for other forms of discrimination as part
of your equal opportunities policy, it would be advisable to simply
expand this to include age. Make sure that your employees and
potential candidates understand the reasons for collecting this
information and the use to which it will be put.
|
|