One in three employers see ageing workforce as a business risk – Canada Life
83% of employers said people would need to work longer to support themselves in later life.
Almost one in three UK employers saw an ageing workforce as a business risk over the next five years, according to research from Canada Life.
The study, Building longevity-ready workplaces in the UK, found most businesses are not fully prepared for longer working lives.
Four in five (83%) employers said people would need to work longer to support themselves in later life, but only one in eight (12%) private sector employers had a plan to recruit and retain older workers.
Most employers offered at least one supportive measure, such as promoting work-life balance (41%), valuing experience as well as qualifications (29%) and offering flexible working for those with caring duties (25%).
Lindsey Rix-Broom (pictured), incoming CEO Europe at Great-West Lifeco and CEO Canada Life UK, said: “The longevity megatrend is shaping lives across the UK and beyond, transforming the makeup of our population and the way we live and work.
“The implications are clear: workplaces must adapt, but this isn’t something that businesses can solve alone. It demands collective solutions that harness the potential of people of all ages.”
Employers said they had a role to play in helping employees adapt to longer lives, including investing in skills through people’s careers (72%), being aware that motivations change with age (70%) and looking at workplace structures differently (65%).
Three quarters (73%) said the Government should do more to help people work longer.












