Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading

Retirements common factor in US, UK labor shortage: IMF

The decline of women in the workforce is a problem specific to the United States, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) found. ©AFP

Washington (AFP) - An exodus of older workers is the "common thread" behind the baffling labor shortages faced by companies in the United States and Britain, the IMF concluded in a report released Wednesday.

The "mismatch" between job openings and workers' willingness to do those jobs, especially low-paying positions, also plays a role, but pandemic aid payments were not a big factor keeping workers away, the International Monetary Fund found in its research.

However its report said the issue of women sitting on the sidelines due to difficulties with childcare and schooling amid the Covid-19 pandemic was a problem specific to the United States alone.

"We found that lower participation among older workers not returning to work is the common thread, and matters most.Mismatch plays a secondary role," authors Carlo Pizzinelli and Ippei Shibata said in a blog post about the findings.

"The fall in female participation is unique to the US, but quantitatively important," they said, noting that as of October 2021, the absence of mothers of children under five years old "accounted for around 16 percent of the total US employment gap with respect to pre-Covid levels."

Contrary to the narrative often promoted in the United States, the researchers found "only a modest and temporary effect" from expanded unemployment aid.

The more important issue in both countries was that "the share of older workers not in the labor force rose markedly."

In the United States, the exodus and early retirements of workers 55 and older combined with the "she-cession" of female workers, "may account for roughly 70 percent of the US employment gap compared with pre-Covid levels," the authors said.

In the UK, the absence of older workers accounts for 35 percent of the shortage.

Both countries have been hit by a surge in employees leaving their jobs known as the "great resignation," but the majority of unfilled openings are concentrated in low-wage jobs, the report found.

"Workers may have become more reluctant to take up jobs in low-skill occupations, which are traditionally associated with lower wages and poorer working conditions," the report said, although that explains only a small fraction of the employment gap.

Resolving the labor shortage and preventing persistent scars on both economies requires addressing the pandemic so workers can return to their jobs, the authors said.

They also recommend "well-designed training programs to reduce risks of mismatch."

In the United States, they called for "expanded childcare and preschool opportunities," measures US President Joe Biden has pushed for in legislation that is stalled in Congress.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.