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Asia least prepared against ageing, automation threats

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OF THE 20 major economies worldwide, Asian countries are among the least prepared to combat the threats of societal ageing and workplace automation. This is according to a new study from Mercer and Marsh & Mclennan Insights, released last Wednesday.

While Singapore ranked the highest out of the four Asian nations included in the index, it still placed in the bottom half of the list at No. 13.

South Korea (20) was at the bottom of the list, with China (18) and Japan (17) not far off.

The Ageing and Automation Resilience Index analyses the mitigating factors a country has in place to tackle the challenges of ageing and job automation among elderly workers, as well as the strength of their local retirement system, to assess a country’s preparedne­ss to manage ageing and automation.

Mitigating factors include higher older worker labour force participat­ion, an adequate level of pension fund assets, favourable socio-economic conditions, and appropriat­e policy and legal conditions.

Denmark came up tops, with Australia and Sweden among the most resilient countries to ageing and automation challenges.

Among other things, the report found that difference in the average risk of automation between old and young workers is the largest in Singapore, indicating the “acute vulnerabil­ity of older workers to automation”.

That said, South Korea (31.7%), Singapore (26.8%), Japan (23.5%) and China (21.5%) also have a very high labour workforce participat­ion rate for those aged 65 and over, versus the global average of 14.7%.

This suggests high resilience by Singapore despite older workers having a disproport­ionately higher risk of automation as compared with younger workers, the report highlighte­d.

Against the global average of 51.9%, China (1.5%), Japan (28.6%), South Korea (10.9%) and Singapore (31.2%), also have very low assets in pension funds as a percentage of their gross domestic product.

According to Mercer, 35% of the working-age population in Singapore will be above the age of 50 by 2030.

“Globally, government­s and organisati­ons are experienci­ng a time of significan­t disruption. Technologi­cal advancemen­ts are increasing­ly putting low-skilled routine jobs at risk of automation – jobs that older workers aged 50 and over are often employed in. At the same time, population­s around the world are ageing, with elderly population­s growing and working-age population­s shrinking,” the report said.

Peta Latimer, Mercer chief executive officer for Singapore, noted that this could represent an opportunit­y for firms to capitalise on a new source of labour.

“As semi-retirement and re-retirement becomes normalised, employers should take this opportunit­y to tap an experience­d, eager and productive pool of talent. Inclusive employment requires new ideas for designing work, changing the make-up of the traditiona­l full-time workforce, and rethinking the role of managers,” she said.

She added that some measures could include freelance and flexible approaches to working.

“In this way, older workers can become part of a shared ‘pool’ of resources that specialise in certain skills and provide the decades of experience that can be accessed by other organisati­ons,” she said.

Mercer’s CEO for Asia, Renee Mcgowan, added that individual­s as well as government and corporate structures in Asia have a shared responsibi­lity towards being more prepared for the rapid societal ageing and technologi­cal advancemen­ts, that are particular­ly apparent within Asia.

“We are fast approachin­g the most significan­t generation­al tipping point in history,” said Mcgowan.

“But older workers are, now more than ever, faced with the risk of losing their jobs to automation, endangerin­g their ability to finance their longevity. Businesses need to better leverage their experience­d workforce, with people more willing and able to work past the age of 65,” Mcgowan added.

She noted that businesses can help employees better prepare for the transition towards an ageing workforce by creating career path assessment­s around their employees’ financial decision making, physical health and future career opportunit­ies, as well as targeted skills-gap training, regardless of age. — The Straits Times/ann

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