A lot has changed in the world of work since the UK first announced the prospect of a new Employment Bill in 2019. The COVID-19 pandemic created seismic changes in the way we work and has changed how many people see their future in work. For many that future means more flexibility and so the UK needs a new Employment Bill more than ever.
At the Centre for Ageing Better, we urge the Prime Minister to deliver on promises made three years ago to extend flexible working and Carers’ Leave. We want to see a Queen’s Speech that grants the right for people to request flexible working to be in place from day one of employment. We would also like to see employees given a new right to five days Carers’ Leave each year.
Making this legislation a reality and not just a promise will make a huge difference to the lives of many, both in work and currently out-of-work. In particular it will have a profound impact on the ability of people to work for longer, in line with the Government’s ambition to increase State Pension Age. The need for such changes has become more critical since the bill was first proposed.
As detailed in our recently-published The State of Ageing 2022 report, the number of people aged 50 to 64 who are neither working nor looking for work has risen by 228,000 since the start of the pandemic, and the employment rate in this group has fallen by 1.8 percentage points. What the UK has experienced over the past two years has been an exodus of older workers from the labour market – not into unemployment, but into ‘inactivity’ (mostly retirement), which means they have chosen to remove themselves from the workforce entirely.
This, coupled with significant skills shortages and vacancies in many industries currently, means our economy needs older workers more than ever. The Government needs to be doing everything it can to help attract these workers back into the workplace and that response needs to be immediate. Before the pandemic, employment rates among over 50s had been rising for more than twenty years. But the disruption of the pandemic stalled this progress and it now needs a kick-start from legislation to set the trend heading back in the right direction.