The UK labour market remains unfavourable to older workers with employment rates continuing to be significantly below levels seen prior to the economic turmoil of COVID-19, latest ONS statistics show.
Labour market stats released this morning show that the economic inactivity rate for 50-64 year olds is 1.3 percentage points higher than it was around three years ago (Dec-Feb 2020), just before the pandemic started.
There are over 244,000 more workers aged 50-64 who are economically inactive for the period December to February 2023 than before the pandemic, according to the new data.
Ageing Better is calling on the government and employers to make more concerted efforts to improve job flexibility, training and employment support for older workers in order to finally shake off COVID’s malign impact which has persisted for considerably longer than other age groups.
The employment rate for 50-64 year-olds now stands at 71.3% compared to 72.6% before the pandemic.
The employment gap between people aged 35-49s and those aged 50-64s remains wider than before the pandemic and now stands at 14.6 percentage points – 1.4 percentage points higher than at the start of 2020.