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Young, white and male? You’re fired

As banks step up their redundancy programmes, will young white males with little recourse to discrimination legislation find themselves at the sharp end of job cuts?

“First we had to watch out for women, then ethnic minorities, then gay and transgender people, then disabled people – and now old white boys are suddenly playing the age discrimination card. It doesn’t leave us with many people to choose from,” says an MD at one US bank.

Linda Jackson, a director of Fairplace, which provides transition services to redundant bankers, says they’ve had “a couple” of Afro-Caribbeans coming to them from banks, but that most of the redundant bankers coming through their doors are young white males. She points out that this could, however, be because most banks are disproportionately staffed by white males aged less than 35.

An aversion to discrimination claims doesn’t appear to have been uppermost in the minds of all banks making job cuts. Charles Ferguson, of Ferguson Solicitors, says he’s currently representing a female CDO trader who was made redundant after she lost £24m. Her male boss was responsible for desks which lost £750m and is still in situ. “It just so happens that all the traders who lost their jobs were women and that the bank no longer has any senior female traders left,” Ferguson says.

But he adds that banks would be stupid not to be wary of cutting people who might claim discrimination: “It ups the ante enormously – you’re talking millions of pounds in compensation as opposed to a cap of £65k for an ordinary unfair dismissal case.”

In theory, people who are sacked because they’re easy targets can bring a reverse discrimination claim. In practice, this doesn’t happen. “These laws weren’t passed to protect white males,” mulls Ferguson.

COMMENTS

Mike Duncan, Derivatives,  Tue 24 Jun 08

a well balanced article and yes young white men are the easiest to fire.

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Mary, Investment Banking / M & A,  Tue 24 Jun 08

Sounds like another article written by/ influenced by lawyers who represent corporates rather than employees. I wonder if there is another high profile case in the pipeline they are trying to undermine.... It overlooks the fact that to win a court case you need very strong evidence of sexual/racial discrimination, ideally in writing. If you just get verbal abuse, it is very difficult to prove and don't expect your colleagues to act as witnesses to support you, many will have very short term memories.... Face it if you are in banking you expect to take a lot of abuse, winning in court or out of court is not as easy as these articles suggest!

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asdf, Hedge Funds,  Tue 24 Jun 08

this article is TRUE TRUE TRUE.  of course, people have to object.  it must be that their political correctness is on auto-pilot.

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Richard Sole, Trading,  Tue 24 Jun 08

It always makes me laugh when I read articles like this and the assumption that if you're canned you've a good chance of screwing bundles out of  your firm for unfair dismissal.  A few years back I was made redundant . The company was in clear breach of contract. I took my case to a top contracts lawyer and he 100% agreed with my sentiments but advised me not to sue because:  a) It'd be a high court case and as such would take 9mths to a year to go to trial. b) Even if I won chances are they'd appeal so another anxious wait. c) If I lost the case the costs would be such that I'd have to sell my house to pay them. And d) I'd never work in the City again.


I took the redundancy money and ran.

Fact is that most companies can outspend any disgruntled ex-employee so litigation is actually quite rare.

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Anon, Investment Banking / M & A,  Tue 24 Jun 08

To Efinancial: How about writing some informative articles, which would give people a better idea about the obstacles employees are likely to face if they brought a claim, rather than writing yet another sensationalised article which stirs up ignorance and resentment!

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Camille, HR & Recruitment,  Tue 24 Jun 08

A pathetic article full of nothing. Pick up a book on probability.

This newletter getting more and more flashy headlines, followed by empty content. Another collateral of the credit crunch?

Next month : Paris Hilton and Britney Spears show some skin.

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Walter, FX & Money Markets,  Tue 24 Jun 08

Any of you ever worked anywhere near the evil HR?  Of course there's more than a grain of truth here.  The evil HR is soooo careful to avoid litigation, and unfortunately, over the years, people with any toehold whatsoever have forced the issue.

This young white male trend was apparent in 2001, and is screaming out now.  And it's not to do with the volume.

Wake up!  You all live in the real world, with real issues!

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A Johnson, Credit,  Tue 24 Jun 08

Linda Jackson's comments are nonsense bordering offensive. My first question to her would be, has she ever worked in any investment banks or even been to one? Probably not. My second question would be what are the numbers of white employees vs afro carribbean employees? She should then do the maths and discover for herself that the majority of employees are white, male and young as she puts it, so surprise, surprise it's very likely that the majority of those unfortunately being made redundant are likely to be white, male and young. It's really very simple. She should have concentrated more on her maths lessons on probability at school before making such bold inaccurate conclusions to find someone to blame. Her comments shouldn't be published. Absolute rubbish.

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YBF, Trading,  Tue 24 Jun 08

what utter nonsense

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Brigitte, Private Equity / Venture Capital,  Wed 25 Jun 08

What a ridiculous article . It has just added to the stupidity, victim fantasy and general absurdity in the world.
People get fired. Especially now. Please grow up

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