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PRIVACY
Enterprise

Businesses shun flexible roles despite coronavirus upheaval

A new survey shows that businesses still favour traditional working patterns,which 'flexclude' women, carers and older workers.

Employers favour office-based full-time roles but women, carers and older workers with health issues face being excluded from the workplace.

Most jobs do not offer flexible working despite the huge change in the world of work caused by the coronavirus crisis, new research suggests.

A study of more than six million job vacancies over the past year indicated that four out of five did not include an option to work flexibly.

Timewise, which campaigns for flexible working, said its findings showed the difficulty of finding jobs which demanded anything other than full-time, workplace-only roles.

Timewise chief executive Emma Stewart said: “The outlook for all jobseekers is stark but for those needing to work flexibly it is even worse.

“Women, carers, older workers and those with health concerns are currently at the greatest risk of becoming ‘flexcluded’ from work, as new ways of working fail to be reflected in employers’ recruitment advertising.

“We are calling on employers to simply adopt the same approach for job seekers as they are currently taking with employees, and to say so in job adverts.

“Whether offering remote working, or part-time hours, or staggered start and finish times. We have a real opportunity as we rebuild the economy to finally create a level playing field for the millions for whom flex is now both a necessity and an expectation.”

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