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Third Age Guidance: Research Into Guidance Needs and Methodologies
Third Age Guidance: Research Into Guidance Needs and Methodologies
'Careers in Context: new challenges and tasks for guidance and counselling'
This paper is dedicated to the memory of my uncle, Geoffrey Palmer, who died this
year at the age of 92. Although he was in poor health, he was still writing and selling
books right up to the end.
Abstract
1 Introduction
The focus of this paper is on the labour market and the term 'work' is here used to refer
to paid work, through either employment or self-employment, and is chosen purely for
convenience. This usage is not meant to imply that other forms of activity, such as
caring, housework, do-it-yourself, exchanging services, voluntary work and so on, are
not 'real' work – they are, and they add substantially to the health of a country, its
economy and its people. Other forms of 'real' work include 'informal' work (in practice,
often exploited, low paid and unprotected, and in some cases indistinguishable from
slavery, such as forced prostitution) and illegal activity, which detract from well-being.
The kind of work our project team believes that older people in need of an income –
just as much as younger people – deserve paid work in the legal economy that meets
their individual needs, capabilities, desires and aspirations.
A group which faces a particular challenge for guidance is that of the 'Third Agers', a
term used in this paper for people above a certain (indefinable) age and still in work or
seeking work. One aim of this paper is to show that older people are characterised by
heterogeneity in terms of social variables – without even mentioning personality,
aspirations, family situation, interests and all the other factors that make each person
unique. Another is to highlight the particular difficulties of older people in the labour
market.
Everywhere in Europe, and in many cases beyond, life expectancy has increased as
the birth rate has fallen, leading to an increased proportion of the population in the
higher age ranges. We can conceptualise at least four 'ages of man' (pace William
Shakespeare):
• the 'First Age', up to the end of formal education (whether primary school or
postgraduate);
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Third Age Guidance: research into guidance needs and methodologies: P Clayton 2005
changing perceptions of what 'old' means in terms of chronological age (Gray 2004).
The 'working professional grandmother' is a good example of this.
The age at which people are considered 'old' varies greatly, according to the way
official statistics are presented, sector and labour market status. In some occupations,
such as computer engineering, 35 is considered old; in others, such as politics, 60 may
be rather young. Between 45 and 50 is a commonly-used boundary between the
Second and Third Ages, but as Plant (2004) points out, an unemployed person might
enter the Third Age after 45 whereas someone entering their final professional phase
might be considerably older. In both Denmark and Sweden the main boundary appears
to be 55, whereas in Spain it is 45. As for the boundary between the Third and Fourth
ages, this may be as late as 80 or more, depending on when formal work ceases. And
who is to say that a retired 70-year-old who has an active life outside the labour market
has entered the Fourth Age? So there is no consensus and no 'magic age' at which
one becomes 'old' or even 'older' …
A more helpful approach is that of one partner who believes that they are 'persons who
at some point of their careers have changed their social or labour condition (or
somebody has done so for them) into a more senior status' (Jacobo Moreno, by email,
31.05.05). This is an important point, also well expressed in the following quotation: 'It
is often the behaviour of others that makes a person more conscious of his or her own
age' (IBW-Euroinstitut 2005). It is not only a question of how old you feel but also of
how old others make you feel, and the power of others to translate their perceptions in
concrete reality in terms of the labour market – in other words, through age
discrimination. This exists not only in employment but also through discourse, notably
in the media. Older people are often seen as a 'problem group' and this can become a
self-fulfilling prophecy.
One thing is clear from the disparate range of ages considered as Third Age:
chronological age itself has limited significance (IBW-Euroinstitut 2005). The next
section will demonstrate the importance of other variables and the heterogeneity of the
Third Age group.
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Third Age Guidance: research into guidance needs and methodologies: P Clayton 2005
exceeded in Europe only by Iceland where 84% aged 50-69 are in the labour force
(Vilhjálmsson 2005), and their unemployment rate at 4.1% is below the 16-64 average
of 4.9%. The Swedish government, however, is not complacent about this and seeks
even higher participation in order to improve the pension situation for both individuals
and the state (Persson 2005). There are also people who carry on long after official
retirement age, for example, nearly 10% of Danish men between 67 and 74 (Plant
2004). In France, those aged 50 and over constitute about one-fifth of the labour force
and this is increasing in all sectors. One-third of all teachers and public sector
executives are in this age group (IRFA Sud 2005).
Generally, however, the percentage in the labour force decreases quite dramatically
from a certain age. In Austria, three-quarters of those aged 50-54 are in the labour
force but only 42% of the 55-59 group and as few as 12% of the 60-64 group. In
Denmark, which has a general participation rate well above the EU average, 57% of
the 55-64 group (compared with Germany at 50% and Austria at 30%) are working but
this decreases substantially between 60 and 66 (Kocher 2005; Plant 2004). In the UK
two-thirds of those aged 50 and above are working but only one-third of men aged 60-
64, even though the state pensionable age is 65 (Ford 2004).
Age is not the only factor: other variables also play their part.
The participation of Third Age women is generally lower than that of men. For example,
in Austria, women aged 55-64 are less than half as likely as men to work and in
Germany only one-third of the women aged 55-64 are employed (IBW-Euroinstitut
2005; Kocher 2005). In Denmark, too, women leave work from 60 onwards (Plant
2004). In France, older unemployed women are more likely than men to obtain short-
term contracts or part-time work or both and lower rates of pay (IRFA Sud 2005).
Married men are more likely than single men or married women to stay in work (Plant
2004).
Highly qualified people are the most likely remain in the labour market, partly because
their earnings can be high and their work less physically demanding than that of
manual workers (Kocher 2005; López 2005; Plant 2004) although, conversely, their
greater financial resources allow them to leave earlier too (Humphrey et al 2003).
Many continue to work because they enjoy working. Low skilled people, on the other
hand, if not forced out by disability or redundancy, are also likely to stay on through
financial need (Clayton 2005; IRFA Sud 2005). In Spain, the biggest proportions of
those aged 44 and above and in employment are male professionals aged 45-50 and
construction workers (López 2005).
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Other factors include sector, size and type of firm and region. In France, older people
are more likely to be found in large firms in the south and centre, but fewer in the north
and very few in computing and social and cultural welfare. The regional difference is
partly because of mid-career migration to the south, particularly in the public sector and
financial services (IRFA Sud 2005). In the UK there are wide regional variations, with
the highest Third Age participation in the South-East and the lowest in the West of
Scotland (Clayton 2005).
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Third Age Guidance: research into guidance needs and methodologies: P Clayton 2005
over three-quarters of these completed only primary school (Vilhjálmsson 2005). The
people with the greatest difficulty in finding work at any age are those from ethnic
minorities and the problem becomes more acute with age (Ford 2004; Plant 2004).
State policy also affects work rates. In France, people over 50 appear to have low
unemployment rates; but from 55 some people become eligible for retirement pensions
and by 57.5 anyone can apply for these. Furthermore, unemployment benefits increase
after 50 and this lowers the incentive to look for work (IRFA Sud 2005). This is,
however, a reaction to the reality that it is very difficult to find a job after the age of 50.
Those who do are likely to be male, qualified and not long unemployed. In the UK, a
similar situation has arisen from a less formal policy – that of deeming many of the
older long-term unemployed incapacitated, and moving them from the unemployment
to the invalidity statistics (Ford 2004).
Although there has been some rise in Third Agers re-entering employment, for example
in Spain and the UK (López 2005; Ford 2004), there is ample evidence that those older
unemployed people who continue to seek work face adverse discrimination from
employers (Ford 2004; López 2005). This is an important factor in decrease in
jobsearch activity as many become discouraged: perhaps for every ten people aged
fifty or more registered unemployed there are twenty-five who have withdrawn from the
labour market for this reason (Ford 1997). In England, 20% of job vacancies are
unfilled because of a lack of skilled applicants, and yet there are older people with
these skills who do not apply because of past experience of age discrimination (Ford
2004).
This discrimination occurs partly because unemployment carries a stigma that attaches
itself to individuals (Persson 2005), and the longer someone is unemployed, the less
'employable' s/he becomes (Ford 2004). Some employers excuse age discrimination
on the grounds that older people are 'more expensive' and 'less productive', although
highly skilled (expensive) professionals are less likely than most to become
unemployed. Furthermore, the productivity levels of individual workers are very difficult
to measure and may be affected by access to training or the health of the sector in
general (IRFA Sud 2005).
As is the case with adult vocational guidance generally, that for older people is patchy
and where it exists it is provided by a range of agencies. In Denmark, Germany,
Sweden, Austria and Spain, guidance and counselling are provided directly through
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Third Age Guidance: research into guidance needs and methodologies: P Clayton 2005
• the Vocational Promotion Institute, a social partnership organising training for the
unemployed and those at risk of redundancy and guidance for older people;
• Initiative50 and Initiative40 which help older job seekers to re-enter work;
• the Austrian Senior Experts Pool, through which retired managers act as teachers,
coaches and mentors;
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Third Age Guidance: research into guidance needs and methodologies: P Clayton 2005
In the UK, despite a high profile being given to Third Age issues, such as the Age
Positive campaign by the Department of Work and Pensions, there are few targeted
guidance initiatives and older people tend to use all-age services less than do younger
people. Initiatives include:
• JobCentre Plus, which co-ordinates the New Deal 50 Plus for those out of work for
at least six months, and the In Work Training Grant for older people who obtain
work and who qualify financially for this grant;
• telephone and Internet services, such as LearnDirect and career service web sites
– these are not targeted at older people but are useful to them;
• a small but growing number of initiatives by large employers keen to retain their
employees;
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Third Age Guidance: research into guidance needs and methodologies: P Clayton 2005
The main thrust of the lifelong learning agenda is the importance of updating
knowledge in an era of rapid technological change. Many adult educators have serious
reservations about the vocational focus of the agenda; but there is undoubtedly a need
for such learning and particularly for older people who in many cases did not have the
educational opportunities that are now available for young people or the early
acquaintance with computers and modern communication technologies that they grow
up with. This issue, of retraining opportunities for older adults in a fast-changing
economy is an absolutely critical one. Two questions arise: is learning available to
older people and, if so, do they participate in it?
The answer depends partly on how 'learning' is defined. It is pointed out that older
people do continue learning but often informally or through self-study (IBW-Euroinstitut
2005). Formal learning opportunities, however, vary throughout Europe. In Sweden,
Denmark and Iceland, popular education, trade union education, liberal education, folk
high schools and study circles are among the types of learning open to all, irrespective
of age (Persson 2005; Plant 2004; Vilhjálmsson 2005). In the UK, too, there is a range
of opportunities, from Workers' Educational Association classes to the Open University.
In Germany a wide range of courses is being developed for older people, including
distance learning, multi-media exercises for self-directed learning and face-to-face
courses delivered flexibly as to timing (IBW-Euroinstitut 2005).
In Austria, however, adult education, although it certainly exists, can be hard to find
and there is a low take-up by people over 50 (Kocher 2005). The French and Spanish
partners found examples only of training, either by employers or for the unemployed
(IRFA Sud 2005; Lopez 2005). A European survey, however, found that the amount of
vocational training undertaken by employees declined with age, and especially training
that was helpful for career progression. Yet older workers were more likely than
younger ones to state that they needed training in certain aspects of their work, such
as using a computer, though less likely to express a wish for training in being well-
organised, imaginative and dealing with the public (Spence & Kelly 2003). Sweden is
one exception: 65% of those aged 45-54 receive training and this falls only to 58% in
the 55-64 cohort (Persson 2005). Poor access to employer training – except for those
who are already well qualified - is also reported for the UK, although it is estimated that
one-third of people aged 50-64 have inadequate literacy and numeracy (Ford 2004), an
issue being addressed now through the government's Employer Training Pilots that
focus on basic skills (see http://etp.lsc.gov.uk); and for France, except in financial
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Third Age Guidance: research into guidance needs and methodologies: P Clayton 2005
services, transport and public administration (IRFA Sud 2005). Entry to apprenticeships
is usually reserved for young people and older people may be ineligible for educational
grants, including those for higher education (Ford 2004).
It is a moot point as to how many 'retired' people actually want to work but there is
evidence that many do, but do not have the qualifications or 'employability' facets to
find a job. Third Agers, while including some highly qualified people, are on the whole
less well educated or qualified than younger people and, as noted above, even when in
work receive less training. Nevertheless, Third Agers even without formal qualifications
often have valuable skills learned through experience (Ford 2004).
As the labour force becomes more skewed towards older workers who, nevertheless,
will continue for some time to experience problems in re-entering the labour market and
obtaining the training needed to secure their jobs, guidance services will have to adapt
to this new target group.
This will mean, inter alia,
• adapting their methods to serve clients who will in most cases have more work and
life experience than the guidance workers themselves;
• acting as advocates with learning providers to help them develop programmes for
older learners which are suitable in terms of approach and mode of delivery;
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Third Age Guidance: research into guidance needs and methodologies: P Clayton 2005
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