Citi GPS Report: Economic and Social Mobility – The Role of Business in Improving Outcomes
Previous Citi GPS reports have underlined the economic imperative for gender and racial equality. “We have shown that delivering greater equality is not only socially and morally the right thing to do, but also smart economically — for governments, corporates, and investors,” says Andrew Pitt, Citi’s Head of Research for the Institutional Clients Group. “There is now a growing awareness of the potential that greater economic and social mobility could bring, with some of the most significant initiatives currently taking place in the UK,” he adds.
Socioeconomic status is multi-faceted, encompassing economic capital (like income and wealth), social capital (like access to networks), and cultural capital (like an individual’s mode of self-presentation). The report shows that each form of capital has an impact on access to work and gives recommendations on how employers can mitigate the impact of each.
While relative economic mobility is low in much of
Multiple factors are driving employers to address the issue of social mobility, including the demands of serving a wide customers base, a need to increase the supply of talent, and pressure from investors as part of the “S” in the environments, social, and governance (ESG) framework.
Employers are implementing a wide range of interventions — from philanthropic outreach into lower income communities to targeted programs that seek to bring these groups into the organization’s recruitment pipeline and, ultimately, system change to ensure equal access to and opportunity within an organization for all, regardless of socioeconomic background.
Many employers have focused their interventions on entry-level roles and young talent with very few employers supporting older workers to access opportunities for economic and social mobility.
The most pressing challenges faced by employers trying to improve economic and social mobility include (1) a lack of data and (2) attitudinal difficulties or misconceptions of the issue. The support mechanism that employers were most likely to call for was more work to join the dots between education and employment, including improving the provision of career advice and increasing the role of vocational skills in school curricula.
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Source: Citi