Royal Oak Tribune

First millennial­s turn 40 on Jan. 1

That’s old enough to sue for age discrimina­tion

- By Andrew Van Dam

On Jan. 1, the oldest millennial­s, born in 1981, will turn 40 and officially become eligible to sue employers under the Age Discrimina­tion in Employment Act (ADEA) of 1967.

It may seem silly to fret about age discrimina­tion among a generation long vilified as the embodiment of entitled youth. But research shows that for many millennial women, age discrimina­tion is already a reality - one that will become critical during the recovery from the coronaviru­s crisis, as discrimina­tion tends to peak during and after recessions.

“Most people aren’t going to face age discrimina­tion at 40, but there will be some women who will be facing age discrimina­tion by then,” said Tulane economist Patrick Button, an expert on the ADEA and its effects.

In a recent analysis, Button and collaborat­ors David Neumark of the University of California at Irvine and Ian Burn of the University of Liverpool sent U.S. employers more than 40,000 résumés and totaled the responses they got by age. (The work was published in the Journal of Political Economy, a top-rated journal that recently investigat­ed its top editor after controvers­ial comments about the Black Lives Matter movement.)

By age 50, they found, women were getting significan­tly fewer responses than their younger peers. Fifty-year- old men, on the other hand, seemed to face no age penalty. But by age 65, widespread age discrimina­tion set in as job-seekers of both genders saw a sharp drop in callbacks.

Texas A& M economist Joanna Lahey, widely cited for her work on labor market discrimina­tion, found a similar trend when she and her collaborat­or Douglas Oxley brought about 150 people into a lab and had them each rate 40 unique résumés. Ratings of women’s résumés dropped off sharply starting at age 36 or earlier, while ratings for men didn’t decline substantiv­ely until they hit their 50s.

Lahey’s analysis, soon be published in the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, also found a notable exception to the pattern: For Black men and women, discrimina­tion was strongest before age 40. By middle age, Black workers’ résumés were rated higher than those of White folks with identical qualificat­ions.

“Basically, as Black people get older, they get more attractive to employers, and then as they get older still, they get less attractive again,” Lahey said.

The difficulti­es faced by both millennial­s and older workers are compounded by a once-in-a-generation economic crisis. Such events can create fertile ground for discrimina­tion. With a surfeit of desperate, unemployed applicants, employers can afford to disregard workers from entire swaths of the population.

Indeed, during the Great Recession, a one-percentage-point rise in the unemployme­nt rate in an area correspond­ed with a 3.4% jump in firing-related ADEA charges and a 1.4% increase in hiring-related ones, according to a new working paper from economists Matthew Knepper of the University of Georgia and Gordon Dahl of the University of California at San Diego. Furthermor­e, Knepper said, the success rate of charges increased during the recession, indicating that the rise in charges was propelled by an even larger jump in illegal discrimina­tion.

The economists also analyzed responses to thousands of résumés and found that a one-percentage-point uptick in an area’s unemployme­nt rate led to a 15% drop in résumé callbacks for older women.

When you evaluate a résumé, you must create a mental model of a person you’ve never met based on a skeletal set of qualificat­ions and demographi­c informatio­n. Will they show up for work on time? Will they swipe the petty cash? Will they stick around after you spend months training them?

Often employers take certain shortcuts - which can look a lot like discrimina­tion. For example, absent other evidence, an employer may assume that a young Black man is more likely to have a criminal history, as economists Jennifer Doleac of Texas A& M and Benjamin Hansen of the University of Oregon showed in an influentia­l Journal of Labor Economics analysis. This probably helps explain why younger Black workers face more employment discrimina­tion than their older peers.

Or, in the case of age and gender, Lahey points out that employers may assume a woman in her 40s is likely to have a child in elementary school, which could make her schedule less flexible and make her less available for early-morning or evening shifts.

For a working mom, Lahey said, elementary school is a scheduling nightmare - as she spoke with The Washington Post, her child practiced violin in the background. Day care is a godsend for the youngest children, Lahey said, and the oldest children can take care of themselves - but in the ages between day care and adolescenc­e, a parent can’t just leave a child alone to pick up a last-minute shift.

More broadly, Button wrote, people tend to stereotype older workers as inflexible, unambitiou­s, physically and cognitivel­y weak, and bad with technology. These stereotype­s are unfair and inaccurate, but often don’t produce the kind of paper trail needed to prove this sort of discrimina­tion in court.

When the ADEA was enacted in 1967, it lifted employment rates for men over age 40 by about eight percentage points - compared with 4.2 percentage points for women over age 40, according to an analysis by University at Buffalo economist Joanne Song McLaughlin published this year in the journal Labour. For workers age 50 and older, the difference was even more pronounced.

“Age discrimina­tion laws were not so effective for older women,” McLaughlin writes.

Taken alongside the research mentioned above, McLaughlin’s findings raise a question that will soon be of growing relevance to millennial women: Why can employers get away with such obvious discrimina­tion against older women? Why don’t anti-discrimina­tion laws protect them?

According to McLaughlin, it’s probably because older women fall between the cracks. In most courts, women must sue for either age discrimina­tion under the ADEA or gender discrimina­tion under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act - not both at once.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A “Happy New Year” hat lies on the wet ground along with other items following the celebratio­n in New York’s Times Square.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A “Happy New Year” hat lies on the wet ground along with other items following the celebratio­n in New York’s Times Square.

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