Older adults want to work, but ageism limits participation: Economist

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics will release its monthly jobs report on Friday. Economists will be watching in particular for labor force participation metrics, as older Americans left the workforce following the pandemic. ZipRecruiter Chief Economist Julia Pollak joins Yahoo Finance to give insight into older workers and the labor force.

Despite the pandemic, Pollak indicates that older adults are now participating in the workforce at higher levels than before: "They are living longer and need to work longer to save up for a longer retirement. Another is policy related: we've made it easier for older people to work longer without being punished due to changes to social security. There's a culture shift because jobs are becoming more comfortable and pleasant so if you can stay home in your pajamas and work on a laptop, why not do it a long time?"

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Editor's note: This article was written by Nicholas Jacobino

Video Transcript

[AUDIO LOGO]

JOSH LIPTON: We're just a few days away from the government's monthly jobs report. And one key metric economists are going to be watching for is labor force participation, especially when it comes to older Americans. There have been mixed takes on why older people left the workforce as a result of the COVID pandemic.

Joining us now is ZipRecruiter Chief Economist, Julia Pollak. Julia, it is good to see you. So our labor force is losing older workers. What is going on there, Julia? Walk us through the data.

JULIA POLLAK: Sure. Well, so that initial hit obviously was pandemic related job loss. But now, if you look at participation within that group, it is exactly what the Congressional Budget Office predicted it would be by now based on demographic trends. And the aging of the population.

Averages can lie. So this is a huge group of people. It's 54 million people. It's a growing group. And it is aging.

But if you look within each narrow age band, say you look at 65 to 74-year-olds, and 75-year-olds and older, you'll actually see that participation within each group is going up. We're on track to go from about 5% participation in the early 2000s among workers over the age of 75 to 10% in the 2030. And from about 20% among workers, 65 to 75 up to 30% by the 2030.

JULIE HYMAN: And what's driving that then? Is it a factor of economics that folks need to work? Is it a factor of that older Americans are healthier than they were in the past?

JULIA POLLAK: Yeah, one is that they're living longer. And so they need to work longer to save up for a longer retirement. Another is policy-related. So we have actually made it a bit easier for older people to work longer without being punished due to some changes to Social Security.