The Borneo Post

Starbucks opens Mexico City cafe staffed by seniors

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STARBUCKS customers in Mexico City may notice something distinct about one particular coffee shop’s new employees: They’re all seniors.

The company recently opened its first ever cafe operated by people aged 50 and older, in partnershi­p with the National Institute for Older Persons ( INAPAM), a government welfare programme in Mexico. Fourteen older workers will run the shop.

“It’s becoming more difficult to employ people over 40 years of age,” said Christian Gurria, the chief executive of Starbucks Mexico, according to Reuters. “But the need to keep elderly people in work exists. If the opportunit­y is there, I’m happy to help.”

It’s becoming more difficult to employ people over 40 years of age. But the need to keep elderly people in work exists. If the opportunit­y is there, I’m happy to help. Christian Gurria, chief executive of Starbucks Mexico

Starbucks said the opening builds on an employment agreement it signed with INAPAM in 2011 to offer job opportunit­ies to seniors to help boost their quality of life.

Mexico’s elderly population is increasing rapidly, according to United Nations data, following trends previously seen in Europe, owing to lower birthrates and greater longevity. People aged 65 and older made up 10 per cent of Mexico’s population in 2017, but that figure is expected to more than double to 25 per cent by 2050, the UN projected.

Mexico’s expanding senior population may also become vulnerable to poverty, according to a Rand Corporatio­n study. “One of the primary challenges facing Mexico is a growing older population. The demographi­c transition in Mexico combined with the lack of formal sources of income in retirement place many older persons in a state of financial in security ,” the analysis found. Starbucks said it employs more than 7,000 people in the country, across 61 cities. The company aims to staff 120 older workers in Mexico by the end of next year. The company told The Washington Post in a statement, “Starbucks celebrates its commitment to providing opportunit­ies to everyone and being a multi- generation­s company that embraces diversity and inclusion and welcomes everyone who is seeking employment.”

The older workers hired to run the Mexico City cafe will receive additional benefits, the company said, including an increase in total coverage of their health insurance and an adjusted work schedule to fit their needs.

 ??  ?? A Starbucks coffee shop in New York. — WP-Bloomberg photo by Victor J. Blue.
A Starbucks coffee shop in New York. — WP-Bloomberg photo by Victor J. Blue.

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