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Employability and flexible retirement: Variations in academia in an age of austerity
Authors:Mike Danson  Karen Gilmore
Institution:1. The Surrey Business School, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey GU2 7XH, UK;2. Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, Park End Street, Oxford OX1 1HP, UK;1. MARE – Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre, Faculty of Sciences and Technology, Department of Biology, University of the Azores, Rua da Mãe de Deus 13-A, 9501-801 Ponta Delgada, Portugal;2. University of Dundee, Department of Architecture and Urban Planning, Matthew Building 13 Perth Road, DD1 4HT Dundee, United Kingdom;3. University of the Azores, University of the Azores, Rua da Mãe de Deus 13-A, 9501-801 Ponta Delgada, Portugal;4. The Maritime Institute in Gdansk, D?ugi Targ 41/42, 80-830 Gdańsk and University of Gdańsk Faculty of Economics 81-701 Sopot Armii Krajowej 119, Poland;5. The Maritime Institute in Gdansk, D?ugi Targ 41/42, 80-830 Gdańsk, Poland;6. Marine Scotland, Scottish Government, 375 Victoria Road, Aberdeen, AB11 9DB, Scotland, UK;7. Marine Scotland, Scottish Government, Marine Planning & Policy Division, 375 Victoria Road, Aberdeen, AB11 9DB, Scotland, UK;8. CIBIO – Research Center in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources/InBIO – Associate Laboratory, University of the Azores, Rua da Mãe de Deus 13-A, 9501-801 Ponta Delgada, Portugal
Abstract:With both declining and ageing populations, countries are addressing the threats to their competitiveness by attracting more highly educated workers and by investing in human capital, especially through policies to increase the rates of participation by young people in tertiary education. As the population is still ageing, there are concerns over the affordability of state support for the elderly, their roles in society and the economy. Active and flexible lifestyles extend healthy life expectancy, so extending the length of the working life is increasingly seen as a way to ease the transition to an economy where an ageing population is affordable.Senior academic staff, exemplars of such post-industrial flexibility, have long been accommodated beyond the statutory retirement age. Their benign conditions of work; high private and social returns to experience and knowledge; and their high levels of those skills, labour power and other capacities which do not degenerate with age, combine to prolong the length of their effective working lives. Against this, as in other sectors, redundancies, voluntary severance and other schemes to reduce staffing have encouraged early retirement. Increased demand for higher education has driven changes in the lecturing labour mix, with increasing use of a peripheral workforce of both early career and retiring staff. This has seen semi-retirement within higher education evolving to stretch the period over which withdrawal takes place.In this context, the exploratory work reported here considers the initial responses by employers and trades unions in Scottish Higher Education to the abolition of the default retirement age and the introduction of ‘The Employment Equality (Repeal of Retirement Age Provisions) Regulations 2011’.
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