Survey: 78% of Baby Boomers Think Age Would Be a Factor When Being Considered for a New Position  | Trade and Industry Development

Survey: 78% of Baby Boomers Think Age Would Be a Factor When Being Considered for a New Position 

Mar 18, 2024
Over Two-Thirds Say Age Puts Them at a Disadvantage in Job Searches

A staggering 78% of Baby Boomers (ages 60-78) believe their age would be a contributing factor when being considered for a new position, according to the latest ASA Workforce Monitor® study commissioned by the American Staffing Association and conducted online by The Harris Poll.

68% of Baby Boomers say their age puts them at a disadvantage when finding a new job according to the latest survey from the American Staffing Association and The Harris Poll.

By comparison, 55% of Gen Z (ages 18-27) feel this way, along with 51% of Gen X (ages 44-59), and 39% of Millennials (ages 28-43).  

The news comes as on the heels of data showing that nearly one-in-five (19%) U.S. adults aged 65 and older were employed last year—close to double the number from 35 years ago.

The survey also found that two-thirds of Baby Boomers (68%) believe their age puts them at a disadvantage when finding a new job, compared with 53% of Gen X, 29% of Millennials, and 48% of Gen Z.

Overall, a majority of Baby Boomers (53%) say their age limits their career opportunities. Employed Baby Boomers are also less likely (42%) to ask for a raise in 2024, compared with their younger employed counterparts: 66% of Gen Z, 67% of Millennials, and 51% of Gen X . The Boomer generation is also far less likely to search for a new job in 2024 (21%) compared with their younger counterparts (Gen Z: 69%; Millennial: 50%; Gen X: 37%.)

"It's time for a paradigm shift in how the U.S. labor market views older workers," said Richard Wahlquist, chief executive officer at the American Staffing Association. "Discrimination based on age is illegal and cannot be tolerated. But routing out persistent and growing ageism requires much more than stepped-up legal enforcement.

"Policy makers and HR leaders need to work together to correct and overcome the misconceptions, stereotypes, and biases—conscious and unconscious—of the past. Mature workers have the knowledge as well as the workplace skills accumulated over a lifetime that America needs today and will need even more in the future."

Method

This survey was conducted online within the U.S. by The Harris Poll on behalf of ASA from Jan. 5 to 9, 2024 among 2,094 adults ages 18 and older.  The sampling precision of Harris online polls is measured by using a Bayesian credible interval.  For this study, the sample data are accurate to within +/- 2.5 percentage points using a 95% confidence level. For complete survey methodology, including weighting variables and subgroup sample sizes, please contact Megan Sweeney at 703-253-1151.

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