If you're unemployed and searching for a new job, you better hope your last employer went out of business. Otherwise, according to new research, you're
likely to be discriminated against even if you've been out of work for as little as a month.
In one study, Ho and his team asked 47 experienced HR professionals to review resumes that were identical except for one detail: Half said the candidate was currently employed, and half said the person had been out of work for a month. The "currently employed" candidate received better marks for competence and hireability. [...]
He noted that a third experiment found that job candidates whose previous employer went under received more sympathy. "What does allay people's bias is some explicit indication that losing your job was not your fault -- for example, that the company went bankrupt or suffered some specific setbacks that made layoffs inevitable," Ho said.
This research just backs up what we already know is happening in real life: widespread discrimination against jobless people at a time when a lot of people are jobless. Staffing agencies even
defend their discriminatory practices. Democrats have proposed a bill
prohibiting discrimination against unemployed people, but with Republicans in control of the House, such legislation isn't going anywhere.
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