2 March 2011
Last updated at 07:02 ET
Double the number of people aged 65 and over are working in the UK compared with a decade ago, official statistics show.
A growing number of older people are working either full-time or part-time and make up a rising proportion of the total UK workforce.
The trend is revealed in the Office for National Statistics’ (ONS) data on older workers at the end of 2010.
Youth unemployment was at a record high during the same period.
Long service
In October to December 2010, there were 270,000 full-time workers in the UK aged over 65. This accounted for 2.7% of the total population in that age group. This compared with 106,000 (1.2%) in January to March 2001.
In the same period, there were 600,000 people aged 65 and over who were working part-time, some 6.1% of the age group. There were 306,000 part-time workers, 3.4% of the age group, in the first three months of 2001.
In total, there were 870,000 workers aged over 65 and they made up 3% of the entire UK workforce – double the proportion of the first three months of 2001.
The ONS said that employment rates for the over-65s increased during the recession.
Many of these workers are staying in the jobs where they already have long service, rather than finding new roles.
In the three months to the end of December, 83% of the over-65s had been continuously employed by their current employer for five years or more, including 41% who had been working there for 20 years or more.
Youth unemployment rose to a fresh record high in the three months to the end of December, with more than one in five 16 to 24-year-olds out of work after a rise of 66,000 to 965,000, the ONS has announced previously.
The UK unemployment rate is now 7.9%, with youth unemployment running at 20.5%.
Continued here:
Pension age workers on the rise
