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 The Labor Market Is Sideling Older Workers in Europe and the United States



As populations age and retirement ages rise across Western nations, integrating older workers into the labor force has become an urgent economic priority. Yet a new report from France's Ministry of Labor research office (DARES) reveals that workers over 50 continue to face significant barriers to employment—barriers rooted in both conscious bias and cold economic calculus.

 The French Context: Behind the Curve


France illustrates the challenge starkly. While employment rates for workers aged 55 to 64 have climbed steadily since 2000—reaching 60.4% in 2024—they still trail the European average by five percentage points. Compounding the issue, the threshold for being labeled "senior" in the workplace arrives earlier in France than elsewhere: a 2022 Ipsos survey found that job seekers begin identifying as senior at age 53 on average, while recruiters apply the label at age 50.

 What the Research Shows


To understand the scope of age-based hiring discrimination, DARES analyzed approximately 30 studies from Europe and the United States. The report, titled *"Are Older Workers Really Discriminated Against When Recruiting?"* (published April 22), synthesizes evidence from field experiments and research on age-related stereotypes.


The most compelling evidence comes from audit studies—researchers sending nearly identical résumés to employers, varying only the candidate's age. A 2023 meta-analysis in the *European Economic Review*, which aggregated nearly all such recruitment experiments across Europe and the U.S., found that younger applicants were, on average, **1.5 times more likely to receive a callback** than equally qualified older candidates.


Prejudice Plays a Powerful Role


Age discrimination appears more acute in European labor markets, even though European studies typically define "older" workers at younger ages than their North American counterparts. DARES notes that earlier retirement ages in countries like France shorten the window for employers to recoup hiring and training investments—a factor that may intensify bias.


Surveys of hiring managers further illuminate the stereotypes at play. In a 2015 study by IMS-Entreprendre pour la Cité involving nearly 3,000 French managers, the terms most frequently associated with older workers included "stuck in the past," "outdated," "reluctant to embrace new technologies," and "tired." To counter these perceptions, U.S. research cited in the report advises older applicants to proactively highlight adaptability, technological fluency, and sustained commitment—reframing perceived liabilities as assets.

Beyond Bias: The Economics of Age


However, prejudice is not the sole driver of exclusion. The DARES authors—Véronique Rémy, Véronique Simonnet, and Emmanuel Valat—emphasize that hiring difficulties may also reflect a growing mismatch between wages and productivity as workers age. "It is often hard to distinguish their respective roles," they note.


In France, compensation tends to rise more steeply with seniority than the OECD average, according to a 2018 France Stratégie report. Consequently, older employees often earn more than younger colleagues in comparable roles, even when their output is not proportionally higher. In physically demanding occupations, some performance decline with age may be unavoidable. But in knowledge-based or office settings, the report suggests that exclusion is more frequently attributable to discrimination than to measurable declines in capability.

Toward More Inclusive Hiring


The findings underscore a dual challenge for policymakers and employers: combating deep-seated stereotypes while rethinking compensation structures and workplace design to retain experienced talent. As retirement timelines extend and labor shortages loom in many sectors, creating pathways for older workers is no longer just a matter of equity—it is an economic imperative.

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