Full bibliography

Defending Age Distinctions in Employee Benefits after the Elimination of Mandatory Retirement

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Defending Age Distinctions in Employee Benefits after the Elimination of Mandatory Retirement
Abstract
Approaching the issue through their review of several recent court and tribunal decisions, the authors argue that the legislative policy choice in Ontario and other jurisdictions to permit age-based distinctions in the provision of benefits to employees over age 65, notwithstanding the abolition of mandatory retirement, was not only reasonable but necessary. That choice, in their view, represents a fair, and amply justified, balance between the right of individual employees to continue working past 65, and the right of employees as a collec- tivity to freely negotiate benefit provisions and group insurance plans that are in the interests of the group as a whole.
Publication
Canadian Labour and Employment Law Journal
Volume
17
Pages
255-280
Date
2013
Journal Abbr
Canadian Lab. & Emp. L.J.
Language
en
Library Catalog
HeinOnline
Citation
Charney, R. E., & Horner, M. (2013). Defending Age Distinctions in Employee Benefits after the Elimination of Mandatory Retirement. Canadian Labour and Employment Law Journal, 17, 255–280. http://labourlawjournals.com/abstracts/pdf/CLELJ_17_1_Charney_Horner.pdf