The Phnom Penh Post

Aging workers are a ‘blessing in disguise’, says industry report

- Zhu Wenqian

AGING workers, if given fresh training and imparted new skills, could prove a blessing in disguise at a time of talent shortages, a new industry report in China has found.

Chinese employees who work at government department­s and government-affiliated institutio­ns have shown a more obvious aging trend compared with private firms and foreign companies, the survey report from Zhaopin, an online recruitmen­t company, said.

Among employees working at government institutio­ns, 28.3 per cent of the total staff are aged 46 and above, according to Zhaopin, which surveyed all types of enterprise­s nationwide this summer.

Rise in the number of aging people in China at a time of declining birth rate has resulted in a rapidly aging labour force at Chinese enterprise­s, experts said.

Employers should offer opportunit­ies to train older employees and help them to gain new skills, and thus transform the challenge into a talent advantage, they said.

What enter pr ises worr y about the most is that older employees may be conser vative and less innovative, and t he aging labour force will af fect t he introducti­on and promotion of young ta lent.

“Some enterprise­s did not fully realise the value of the elderly labour force. In fact, well-educated and experience­d older employees can still give full play to their talent at different companies, especially in the field of research and developmen­t, and they can help guide younger employees,” said Zhaopin CEO Guo Sheng.

“Employers should avoid wasting useful resources like middle-aged and elderly labour force. Instead, they should keep, retrain and recruit older employees, and provide tailored and long-term opportunit­ies to study, so that companies can fulfil their labour demand,” he said.

Migration to ‘first-tier cities’

On average, the aging problem of employees at first-tier cities is more significan­t than smaller cities in the countries.

Meanwhile, when it comes to young talent, around 3.6 million people, or 44.2 per cent of total new graduates this year, said they would prefer to work in new first-tier cities – that is, second-tier cities with top economic growth vitality. Those cities include Chengdu, Chongqing, Hangzhou, Wuhan and Xi’an, the Zhaopin report found.

The group is followed by graduates who would like to work in first-tier cities such as Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. They accounted for 30.6 per cent of the total. Many students said work pressure and ever-increasing living costs in top cities made them stressful, the report found.

The demographi­c dividend in China, the world’s most populous country with 1.4 billion people, is gradually weakening. Last year, the birth rate in the country touched a record low of 1.09 per cent since 1949, and there were 249 million people aged 60 and above, hitting a record high, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

Last year, total labour force dropped 4.7 million compared with 2017, down 0.6 per cent year-on-year. In the next few years, total labour force will continue to decline, and enterprise­s will face a further aging talent market, industry experts predicted.

In the past decade, some domestic private technology companies such as Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Huawei Technologi­es Co grew rapidly, and they have attracted a large number of young talent. More than 37 per cent of private companies said they found a decline in the average age of employees in the past three years, according to the report.

For most foreign companies, the current period marks mature and steady growth in China. Equipped with comprehens­ive regulation­s and good salaries and benefits, the turnover rates have been relatively low at foreign companies and the average employee age is increasing.

In addition, labour-intensive companies face the most serious aging problem, as those enterprise­s are no longer attractive to young employees. Young people are willing to look for more profession­al jobs with higher pay. The housekeepi­ng service sector and catering sector are facing difficulti­es in recruiting young workers, and the majority of employees are aged 40 and above, the Zhaopin report found.

“The dividend of talent is the biggest dividend to the developmen­t of China in the future, so enterprise­s should offer more convenienc­e to the aged population who are willing to work,” Guo said.

Lu Xin, former vice-minister of education, said earlier that skilled and talented senior citizens would be the new driving force of economic growth.

 ??  ?? Job seekers pose queries at a job fair in Yichang, Hubei province in China.
Job seekers pose queries at a job fair in Yichang, Hubei province in China.

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