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New survey reveals workplace tensions

The conflicting beliefs of different generations are highlighted in the workplace, with younger employees not appreciating their older colleaguesโ€™ experience. In fact, many young people feel their careers may be “stifled” by the presence of late-retiring workers in the company. As a 21st century labour force must deal with a longer working life and smaller pensions, the contrasting attitudes between ages are becoming more apparent.  

This was the finding of a recent survey of 1,500 people by KPMG, which investigates the inter-generational conflicts that arise within the workplace. Dividing working people into four distinct groups: Baby Boomers born from 1945-1960s, Generation X born in the 1960s-70s, Generation Y born in the late 1970s-mid 1990s and finally, Generation Z born from the mid-1990s onwards, KPMG charts their differences in attitudes and opinions.

KPMG reports that younger workers feel their senior peers โ€œneed to retireโ€ in order for โ€œyounger workers to have a genuine chance of career progression.โ€ A mere 20% of those questioned feel employers would want to retain older workers for their experience within the company, as almost 50% of respondents agree that a much older workforce would โ€œdrain productivity.โ€

In addition to disagreements between age groups, attitudes to employers also differ. A total of 48% of baby boomers are content with earning โ€œenoughโ€ as opposed to 58% of Generation Y who are looking for a higher salary. Similarly, KPMG found that one in four of Generation Y agreed with the statement, โ€œindividuals will increasingly challenge and question their organisationโ€™s purposeโ€, with only 12% of Baby Boomers believing this to be true.