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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

Shocked and appalled, Investment Banking / M & A,  Wed 25 Jun 08

It is rididulous to suggest HR are careful to avoid litigation by minorities. In reality, HR go after anyone who is less valuable to the bank in any dispute. HR do not support minorities any more than they would support young, white male bankers. The way HR avoid litigation is by trying to run up an employees legal costs and refusing to comply with Subject Access Requests, so the employee has no chance of obtaining any real evidence of wrong doing by the bank.

I am concerned this article is trying to turn employees against employees, rather than addressing whether employers have a fair system in place for all employees. It is the employers who who should be held accountable. Efinancial should not be encouraging gay bashing and fueling racial hatred!

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talented young white male, Sales & Marketing,  Wed 25 Jun 08

This is not big news - young white males have been the most discriminated group for years!
Despite being as capable as anyone else, we are often treated unfairly because, as this article highlights, we have little recourse against discrimination.
It's about time this 'negative discrimination' was highilghted and someting done about it!

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Liberal banker, Investment Banking / M & A,  Wed 25 Jun 08

WOW!!! The British National Party are definitely gaining strength with the support of these types of articles by Efinancial!

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hector, Capital Markets,  Wed 25 Jun 08

i see nothing wrong with this article. i have worked in the city for 23 years and have sat in meetings where it has been decided to let white males go rather than face up to the consequences of making an ethnic minority person redundant. having said that, not all ethnic, gay, disables folk are up litigious...but there are a few toxic ones out there who have made a career of suing employers for financial gain by using the minority card.

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Employment lawyer, Compliance / Legal,  Wed 25 Jun 08

Efinancial seem to have stirred up a lot of trouble here with people who probably don't know anything about UK Employment Law. It is not easy to "play the minority card" you need strong evidence which would stand up in court. Many litigants run out of money and never obtain legal redress against a bank with deep pockets.

It would help if Efinancial wrote more factual articles which would allow employees to assess the merits of any inflammatory claims!

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Henry, Consultancy,  Wed 25 Jun 08

I am very disappointed with Efinancial Careers. This article has no real evidence to back up its headline. Its just an eye-catching headline to get people to read it - which is all well and good, but this isnt a tabloid paper! What happened to actually providing useful news and information?! This type of article just adds to stereotypes we have of each other and causes divisions and suspicion in the workplace.

If a company fires somebody based on their performance at work (and not their colour, age or sex,) then they have nothing to worry about. Its common sense and its the way it should be in a civilised society.

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Jud, Trading,  Wed 25 Jun 08

In South Africa it is law that a white male be hired last out of 7 race/gender/disability classifications. Black males and females top the list of candidates that must be hired first if there is the option. As a white male it is flat out sickening.

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Shocked 2, Research,  Wed 25 Jun 08

It would be helpful in the difficult times that many city workers face if efinancials would publish something that would help. The article from the outset is angling to stir up ill feeling and its a sad indictment of efinancials that they would even think about publishing such drivel and only highlights in my opinion, what an unprofessional organisation efinancials must be. The fact that the city is heading for a deep downturn with hardworking city folk being put out of a job and efinancials takes it upon itself to publish this nonsense is shocking. I am white male, I have friends from all walks of life who work hard and play by the rules. Reading this article was a complete shock, for the fact that there is no substance to it whatsoever. The suggestion that white males will be sacked becuase they're an easy target is laughable. If you call yourself a journalist; Sarah Butcher stick to the golden rules of journalism. Here goes; 1) make sure the issue really exists 2) research don't guess 3) when writing about a conflict situation talk to all parties and last but not least; LEARN WHAT YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT. Hopefully this will help you publish better material.

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kwetfung,  Wed 25 Jun 08

Freedom of expression is something we all cherish but maybe some kind of self restraint should be considered and not just publish anything just for the sake of getting more people checking out the website!

How long will it take some extremist to just spread around such nonsense? Thank you for just giving the NAZI party it´s next "substantial evidence" from a "reliable source"

We all know we are facing tough times and people all around the world are getting laid off: it ´s got nothing to do with race and gender. As one said" it´s the economics, stupid!".

I do consider that this website should consider every single article before publishing: this is what we call "responsibility".

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richard sole, Trading,  Wed 25 Jun 08

Not being funny guys and girls but there seems to be a lot of responses to the article in office hours....obviously no fear of the old tin-tack with you people. Sh1t...the boss is headed my way....signing off...bye!

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