Employers in the U.K. can no longer force their employees into retirement at age 65, without justifiable dismissal.
It was announced last week that the policy of forced retirement at 65 has been abolished, in an effort to reduce the amount of pension payouts made to retirees. With the average lifespan of Britons becoming longer, the government hopes this will ease its financial duty in citizens' golden years. Human rights activists and
non-profit organizations have praised the decision, as it creates a better life experience for aging workers. However, many businesses are critical of the policy, as it increases the amount and length of time that employee benefits must be paid by the employer.
News of the change in the U.K.'s forced retirement policy comes only a few days after Miriam O'Reilly, an on-air BBC reporter, successfully sued her former employer for wrongful dismissal, citing that the television network warned her about her aging features and suggested the use of Botox in order to keep the show "refreshed,"
USA Today reported.
Thought in Jeopardy
Step aside, Paul Bunyan. IBM took the Man vs. Machine struggle to a new level when its Watson DeepQA-based supercomputer won over human contestants by $1,000 on a friendly practice round of the long-running game show, "Jeopardy." The computer beat noted "Jeopardy" alums Ken Jennings (the game show's longest winning streak record holder) and Brad Rutter (the show's biggest prize winner) last week, and the three will be competing again in a series scheduled to air mid-February.
Watson has been a project for the IBM company for over four years, and is billed as a self-sustaining computer than can analyze and process information built into its 15 terabytes of RAM. The computer also boasts 2,880 processor cores and has the ability to perform 80 trillion operations per second. (Find out the difference between mega-, large-, mid- and small-cap stocks. We show how each suits particular investing styles. Refer to
Market Capitalization Defined.)
The viewing audience will only see a glowing screen in the place of a human contestant on the shows, but the actual computer,
Wired Magazine reports, is as large as four refrigerators. During the competition, the computer is not connected to the internet, and utilizes no human control. The key to its success in the preliminary Jeopardy rounds is its "natural language processing" capabilities, which allow the computer to decipher multiple phrasings, tonality and suggested themes.
This also marks the first time that the term "supercomputer" has been used in public without ridicule since 1982.
IN PICTURES: 5 Tax(ing) Retirement Mistakes
Conclusion
IBM says the price tag of Watson will significantly drop in the years to come as technology improves, so we may still be a few years from seeing exactly what it is capable of. In the meantime, the good news surrounding holiday shopping is an indicator that we can hold high. And if the
unemployment rate continues to dip, we're in good shape for a full recovery in the future. (Miss last week's financial news highlights? Check out
Water Cooler Finance: Conflicting Job Reports And A Facebook IPO.)