The Covid toll on older workers: 30% of the 1.3million on furlough fear being SACKED when it ends


The Covid toll on older workers: Over-50s more likely to have had their hours cut while 30% of the 1.3million on furlough fear being SACKED when it comes to an end

  • Some 1.3million people aged 50 and over have been furloughed, ONS found 
  • And three-in-10 say there is odds-on chance they will be sacked afterwards 
  • They were also more likely than those under 50 to have their working hours cut 

The economic impact of the coronavirus lockdown on older workers was laid bare today by new figures showing those over 50 were more likely than younger workers  to have their hours cut.  

Some 1.3million people in that age group have been furloughed, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

And three-in-10 of them fear for their long-term job prospects, with around 400,000 saying there is a greater than 50 per cent chance they will be sacked when the scheme comes to a halt. 

The ONS data suggests they have suffered because the jobs they have have been badly hit by the pandemic shutdowns. 

‘Older workers are far more likely to be self-employed than younger workers, with self-employment increasing with age and men being more likely to be self-employed than women in all older age groups,’ the report today found.

‘For workers aged 50 years and over, men are most likely to be working in manufacturing, construction, and wholesale, retail and repair of motor vehicles, while for older women workers, the most common industries are health and social work, education, and wholesale, retail and repair of motor vehicles.’

The ONS reported a fall in employment among those aged over 50 between December and February, driven mainly by the 50-54 and over 65 age groups. 

Additionally the proportion reporting themselves as being self-employed among the over-50s fell by 2 per cent to 19.4 per cent, with an increase in the proportion becoming employees to 80 per cent.

But almost 200,000 people could have been added to the nation’s unemployed, with the ONS noting: ‘The fall in the number of self-employed aged 50 years and over was larger than the gain in the number of employees, leading to an overall seasonally adjusted net loss of 193,000 older workers (down from 10.7 to 10.5 million).

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