Fact Service (August 2014)

Issue 33

Older workforce grows by more than a third

The number of employees over the age of 65 has jumped 36% to 1.09 million since 2010, according to research by Saga.

The coalition government abolished the default retirement age of 65 when it came to power, which has led to the proportion of over-65s in the workforce increasing from 3.4% to 3.6% over the past four years.

The number of employees aged 50- to 64-years-old has also increased by 9% across the same period, from 7.2 million to just under 8 million.

Saga director of communications Paul Green welcomed employees’ ability to choose when they retire instead of being forced out “at the whim of their employer”.

He also urged businesses to see the figures as proof that older employers shouldn’t be “written off”.

“This good news masks the misery that long-term unemployment causes and more needs to be done to help. Recent changes were made by government that removed employers’ national insurance for employing younger workers,” he said.  

“By extending this further to encourage businesses to take on the long-term unemployed, it could mean more take a chance on those who have been out of work for some time, but who are desperate to get back into the workplace.”

www.hrmagazine.co.uk/hro/news/1146038/-65s-tops-million


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