Peter Hoskin

The greying labour force 

As a follow-up to my post yesterday on the number of new jobs being occupied by the over-50s, I should point out that there’s a good piece on the matter by Melanie McDonagh in today’s Times.  McDonagh rightly argues that an increasingly grey component of the labour market is a positive development:

“The notion that people are still being hired as they head for what was once, laughably, called the retirement age should cheer us up.  A workforce that brings together energetic Poles and hardy Brits of the war generation seems rather a good combination given the dearth of skills and any discernible work ethic among many school leavers ….  It’s also a hopeful trend, given that we’re all heading for an extended old age.  Average life expectancy for a professional man is 80, an increase of seven years since the 1970s.  By comparison with previous generations, we’re so many Methuselahs; we may as well work.”

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