Western Mail

More ‘inactive workers’ since Covid in shrinking labour market

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THE UK labour market has shed hundreds of thousands of people since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, with a growing number of older workers choosing to give up their career, new figures show.

A total of 32.5 million people were in employment in the three months to February this year, down from 33.1 million in the same period two years earlier.

The change has been driven by an increasing number of people becoming “economical­ly inactive” – meaning they are of working age but are not currently seeking employment.

This can be because they have taken early retirement, are looking after a family, or are long-term sick.

The number of economical­ly inactive working-age people in the UK stood at 8.9 million in the three months to February, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

This is up 76,000 on the previous quarter and a jump of nearly half a million on the three months to February 2020.

Analysis by the PA news agency shows the rate of economic inactivity among older workers has climbed to its highest level for six years.

A total of 27.2% of people aged 50 to 64 were classed as economical­ly inactive in the latest quarter, compared with 25.2% at the start of the pandemic. The last time the rate stood any higher was in the three months to February 2016.

There are now 302,000 more economical­ly inactive 50- to 64-year-olds than before the pandemic, suggesting an increasing number of older workers are choosing to retire early.

This represents a sharp reversal of the long-term trend before Covid-19, which had seen a growing proportion of people in this age group choosing to remain in employment or actively look for work.

Nearly three-quarters (74.8%) of 50- to 64-year-olds were classed as economical­ly active before the start of the pandemic, up from two-thirds in 2005 and a record high.

The figure now stands at 72.8%. The change has also had an impact on the balance of age groups within the labour market.

Before Covid-19, 50- to 64-yearolds accounted for a steadily growing proportion of all people in employment in the UK, rising from 19% in 1992 – when current records began – to reach 25% by 2008 and 29% by 2020. But this trend has come to a halt in the last two years and the figure currently stands at 28%.

There are early signs that the level of economic inactivity might be starting to rise among 35- to 49-year-olds.

The rate had dropped to a record low of 11.7% in the quarter to August 2021, but has since climbed to 12.4%.

Darren Morgan, ONS, said: “While unemployme­nt has fallen, we are still seeing rising numbers disengagin­g from the labour market, and as they aren’t working or looking for work, are not counted as unemployed.”

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