Chattanooga Times Free Press

Older workers face higher unemployme­nt than mid-career peers

- BY SARAH SKIDMORE SELL

For the first time in nearly 50 years, older workers are facing higher unemployme­nt than midcareer workers, according to a study released Tuesday from the New School.

The pandemic has wrecked havoc on employment for people of all ages. But researcher­s found that workers 55 and older lost jobs sooner, were rehired slower and continue to face higher job losses than their counterpar­ts ages 35 to 54.

It is the first time since 1973 that such

an unemployme­nt gap has persisted for six months or longer.

In every recession since the 1970s, older workers had persistent­ly lower unemployme­nt rates than mid- career workers, partly because of the benefits of seniority. In the current recession, however, older workers experience­d higher unemployme­nt rates than mid- career workers in each month since the onset of the pandemic.

The older workers’ unemployme­nt rates from April through September were 1.1 percentage points higher than mid- career workers’, at 9.7% versus 8.6%, looking at six- month rolling average. The rate was far worse for workers who are black, female or lack a college degree.

The study did not look at workers younger than 35 so as to compare only those with establishe­d careers.

Older workers often face age discrimina­tion, making it difficult to find a job. But the researcher­s believe that employers are less likely to hire older workers at this time because of the health risk created by the pandemic.

The trend could force more people into early and involuntar­y retirement, worsen their financial well-being and exacerbate financial disparitie­s already seen among women and minorities in terms of retirement security.

New School researcher­s estimate 1.4 million workers older than 55 remain unemployed since April. That does not include workers who were unemployed in April and left the work force.

The final years of a career are critical for older workers’ livelihood­s in retirement, the study noted, especially for the majority of older workers who do not have sufficient retirement assets and expect to work longer to make up for it.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/ NATI HARNIK ?? Job seekers exercise social distancing as they wait to be called into the Heartland Workforce Solutions office in Omaha, Neb.
AP FILE PHOTO/ NATI HARNIK Job seekers exercise social distancing as they wait to be called into the Heartland Workforce Solutions office in Omaha, Neb.

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