An Ageing Workforce Strategy is needed to prevent Early Exiters leaving the workforce before retirement and to help tackle growing UK labour shortages, argues a new report published by cross-party think tank Demos in partnership with The Physiological Society and Ageing Better. The report adds the government should appoint an Commissioner for Older People and Ageing to support the delivery of this strategy.
According to Demos’s focus groups, participants aged between 50-64 who had health conditions said they had retired and left work not out of choice, but because they felt powerless and under-supported in the situation they were in. This was reflected in ONS statistics, which found that of those aged 50-65 who left work since the pandemic and have not returned, just 14% accessed occupational health services before leaving their previous job.
Some said the decision had been “taken out of [their] hands”, with one participant saying, "My decision to leave work was devastating... I was resentful about having to leave, but felt I had no other option."
Recommendations for the Ageing Workforce Strategy include:
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Access to occupational health services should be improved by removing the cost barriers for small and medium sized enterprises through reduced employer National Insurance Contributions for organisations that provide access to such support.
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Government and agencies should work together to provide integrated health and employment support to older people rooted in medical and physiological evidence.
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The UK should invest more in physiological research to weaken the link between ill-health and older age, establishing a centre to coordinate UK and international research on healthy ageing.