Financial Wellness – A Key Hiring Criteria?

An amazing 60% of companies used candidates’ credit reports to help make hiring decisions in 2009, according to a recent Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) poll.

So, the natural question is why a credit score of all things would be used to evaluate a prospective employee?

One likely reason might be that employers worry that a poor credit score indicates a lack of responsibility that could ultimately translate into poor performance.

Credit score indicative of a poor performer?

But there may be another important reason…or, at least there should be.  The impact of poor employee financial health on corporate productivity has been well publicized in the wake of a troubled U.S. economy.  Many employers may feel that employees with poor credit are likely to spend significant time at work worrying about or dealing with their personal financial issues.  Or, worse yet, miss work entirely.

Whether or not a FICO score is a suitable barometer for a candidate’s future success, these results reveal that in the minds of many employers, there is an important link between control over personal finances and job performance.

But what about existing employees?

Employers might make more productive use of this link by introducing broad financial wellness education to current employees, rather than simply focusing on the credit histories of a few new hires – especially considering that credit reports are often explicable or simply inaccurate.

Many states are pushing to make the investigation of credit histories by prospective employers illegal. Employers will need to find a new tactic to ensure the financial health of their workforce.  A comprehensive financial wellness initiative can be a much more effective means towards this desired goal.

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