Elderly employment in the European Union: Active aging or overcoming poverty?

W. Nowak
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Abstract

The aim of the paper is to identify scale of and trends in elderly employment in the twenty seven European Union countries and to show determinants of employment in the context of active aging and overcoming poverty. The paper is based on the analysis of empirical data and a critical review of literature. Empirical data for the study are the secondary data retrieved from Eurostat, ILOSTAT and national statistics. The employment rate of people 65 years of age and older has tended to increase in the EU-27 over the period from 2011 to 2021. However, the elderly’s income situation has worsened. In a few countries that recorded a rapid growth of elderly employment, older workers continue to work in order to increase their current income. People 65+ were generally continuing to work based on a voluntary choice than a necessity to earn additional income in most of the richest EU-27 countries. Older European workers are more likely to be employees and own-account workers. At the aggregate EU-27 level, agriculture, forestry and fishing stopped to be the largest employer of people aged 65 years and more in 2021. Older EU workers have been more frequently engaged in human health and social work activities.
欧盟的老年就业:积极老龄化还是克服贫困?
本文的目的是确定27个欧盟国家老年人就业的规模和趋势,并在积极老龄化和克服贫困的背景下显示就业的决定因素。本文基于对实证数据的分析和对文献的批判性回顾。本研究的经验数据是从欧盟统计局、ILOSTAT和各国统计数据中检索的次要数据。2011年至2021年期间,欧盟27国65岁及以上人口的就业率呈上升趋势。然而,老年人的收入状况却恶化了。在一些老年人就业迅速增长的国家,老年工人继续工作以增加他们目前的收入。在欧盟27个最富裕的国家中,65岁以上的人通常是自愿选择继续工作,而不是为了赚取额外收入。年长的欧洲工人更有可能是雇员和自有账户工人。在欧盟27国的总体水平上,农业、林业和渔业在2021年不再是65岁及以上人口的最大雇主。年龄较大的欧盟工人更频繁地从事人类健康和社会工作活动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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