Proportion of over 50s in work set to hit record high

The proportion of people over 50 in employment is set to hit 47 percent by 2030, following a 36 percent increase in the absolute number the last two decades, according to a new report from Legal & General Retail Retirement (LGRR) and the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr).

The ‘Working Late: Over 50s and employment’ report found that the growing trend for people working later in life was particularly driven by people in their sixties, as they adjust to shifts in wealth, lifestyle expectations and respond to State Pension changes.

 

The ageing workforce

The number of people over 50 and in work has increased from 31 percent in 1992 to 42 percent in 2020. While the percentage of working people under 50 has remain fairly consistent during this time, the over 50s group has continued to grow. This has caused a narrowing of the gap in employment rates between the under and over 50s from 42 percentage points in 1992 to 35 percentage points in 2020, with a further narrowing to 29 percentage points expected by 2030.

This trend has been particularly driven by people continuing to work into their sixties, whose employment rate has risen almost twofold in the last two decades, with an increase from 23 percent to 41 percent since 1992.

Even with the option to leave the labour market upon State Pension Age, which is currently age 66 for those close to retirement, many people are continuing to work past this milestone. Eight percent of people over 66 currently are in work, and those in work put in an average of 26 hours a week. According to the report’s forecasting, this number is also set to increase by 2030, to a record 11 percent – an estimated 948,000 people. This percentage could increase further if we see additional changes to the State Pension Age in the next few years.

In recent years, there has also been a narrowing of the retirement age gender gap. While the average age of retirement entry has risen by 1.9 years for men (to 65) since 1992, the average at which women retire has increased by 3.6 years (to 64) as changes in the State Pension and the world of work have started to influence the decision to leave the workforce.

 

Wealth and the over 50s

According to the survey completed for the report, people over 50 who are not yet retired ideally want an income of £23k a year when they do; a moderate income for a single retired person, according to the Pension & Lifetime Savings Association’s ‘Retirement Living Standards’.

[perfectpullquote align=”right” bordertop=”false” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]”Gone are the days of ‘carriage-clock retirement’”[/perfectpullquote]

It’s possible that one of the factors motivating the trend towards older people working for longer is a gradual shift in wealth. While over 50s as a group continue to hold the majority of UK wealth, in cash, property, pensions etc., the percentage has fallen in recent years for those aged 50-64, who have seen their share shrink from 42 percent in 2008-2010 to 36 percent just a decade later. This shift may be influencing the number of older people in work, as they continue to try and bolster their finances in order to meet their desired retirement income.

Andrew Kail, CEO, Legal & General Retail Retirement comments: “Our research demonstrates a significant cultural shift in the world of work. People are continuing to work for longer, in order to reach their desired retirement lifestyle but also in response to changes in wealth, State Pension provision and to reflect the fact that we are living longer as a society. This creates a much more challenging hurdle for people to overcome in order to fully retire. Gone are the days of ‘carriage-clock retirement’ and we need to make sure people understand the implications so that they can better plan for their future and the extent to which work will play a role in it.”

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