What's wrong with pre-employment credit checks?
What's wrong with pre-employment credit checks?
New Zealand Council for Civil Liberties
In
these days of higher unemployment and tougher competition
for jobs, a disturbing trend is beginning to emerge in which
potential employers ask candidates to submit to various
checks as part of the interview process - drug tests, police
checks, credit checks. Yes, credit checks.
One might ask
what someone's personal finance has to do with their ability
to do a job and why a credit check is necessary. The
rationale goes that if someone fails a credit check it means
they are more likely to have been in financial trouble,
which may make them more likely to steal money from the
company, thus credit checking potential employees is
safeguarding the company from potential loss.
To put it
another way, credit checking is a method for screening out
people who may have motivation to be dishonest. Not people
who have been dishonest, mind you.
Agree
or don't get the job
This is not illegal. In New
Zealand, it's not even regulated yet. I believe it's a
practice that's been inherited from the US, and I can't help
but notice that the information used to advise employers
that this is a good idea often seems to come from those who
get paid to do the checks. For most positions which have
little direct financial risk to the company, and for most
people who are basically honest, this practice is
pointless.
But worse, it's an invasion of privacy, and
it's one that puts jobseekers between a rock and a hard
place. Either they submit to the credit check, or they get
automatically screened out because a refusal indicates to
employers that either they have something to hide, or they
are a troublemaker - neither of which are desirable traits
in an employee. So people give consent to credit checks as
part of the interview process.
The ratchet
effect
I am very concerned about the increasing
screening of jobseekers based on their willingness to
consent to various checks, and even more concerned about the
lack of moves from the government to protect workers from
these coerced breaches of privacy.
In an abusive personal
relationship, the one with the power pushes the boundaries
of the other, gradually overstepping them in ways that seem
logical, making sure it's never far enough so the victim can
justify refusing to allow it, giving rationalisations for
why they should allow it, making sure there are larger
negative consequences for refusing than there are for
allowing their boundaries to be breached. This is how
abusers 'groom' their victim until the victim will allow
whatever treatment the abuser chooses to dish out because
they can no longer judge what behaviour is OK to accept, and
cannot stand up for themselves when it's not OK.
In my
opinion, this is what's happening with this credit check
business. There's a relatively plausible rationale for it.
It's an invasion of privacy, but it's one the victim has to
give consent to. Never mind that the 'consent or no job'
factor makes it into a coercive situation - you give consent
therefore it's legal for potential employers to poke around
in your financial history. Or drug test you. Or check your
police record.
People are becoming ok with this growing
list of checks done on them so that they can go shuffle
paper in an office. They are losing track of where their
boundaries are. And in an economy of growing unemployment
where competition for jobs is getting tougher, the human
rights abuses people are willing to consent to so they can
work are expanding.
How far will we allow this to go
before we stand up and go "Oi! This isn't right!"? Because
frankly, the government isn't going to.
• Wendy
Allison's
blog
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ends