Daily Mail

Retire? No way! Boom in total of 80-plus workers

Fitter OAPs flock to part-time jobs

- By Louise Eccles Personal Finance Correspond­ent

THE number of workers in their eighties and nineties has doubled in five years, figures show. Thousands more people aged 80 and over are finding part- time jobs in a move dubbed a social revolution.

More than 42,000 octogenari­ans and nonagenari­ans are in employment compared to 21,000 five years ago.

With pensioners feeling fitter and healthier for longer, more are opting for so- called ‘parttireme­nt’ to keep active and boost their income.

Many are turning to the retail and service industries, while others have launched their own businesses or stay on as directors and advisers.

The Office for National Statistics says 1.4 per cent of people aged 80 and over were in work in 2016, compared to 0.8 per cent in 2011. Most of this rise was in the last two years alone, with 12,000 more people in work since 2014.

Former pensions minister Baroness Altmann said: ‘This is the way of the future. There is a social revolution happening.

‘We are brought up to think it is the norm to retire in your sixties but that is just not the case any more.

‘People are becoming fitter and healthier and many people are choosing to work for longer.

‘If you are working in your eighties it is probably not about the money, it is most likely because you want to work. Flexible working hours for working mothers has helped older people too to find part-time work or to do more home-working.’

Lady Altmann said many pensioners still faced age discrimina­tion, however, and urged employers to ‘ wake up’ to the economic benefits of employing more experience­d staff.

Official figures show there has also been a significan­t rise in workers aged 70 and over, with almost half a million now in work. There are 458,000 in employment compared to 271,000 five years ago.

It means almost six in 100 people aged 70 or over are working. The number of pensioners with jobs has risen significan­tly since 2011 when the default retirement age – which meant bosses could force older workers to leave at 65 – was scrapped.

Paul Green, of over-50s specialist firm Saga, said: ‘With people living longer and healthier lives more Britons in their seventies and eighties are choosing to carry on working full or part- time, do some volunteeri­ng or perhaps make their hobby pay.

‘This is great for individual­s and for society as work is not just about the money – it can keep you physically and mentally active as well as adding to your social life.’

Widowed Jean Miller first retired as a sales representa­tive at 60 but then took other jobs because she was afraid of being lonely. Last year she finally retired from a hair salon where at 93 she was the oldest worker by decades.

She says spending her days alongside twentysome­things kept her young and fit.

She stopped after trouble with her hips made the hour-long drive to work difficult.

But she still misses the bustle of the Vidal Sassoon salon in Glasgow which offered her a job at 75 as a cloakroom assistant.

Mrs Miller, of Falkirk, says she went on every staff night out.

She added: ‘If you sit down and talk to the wall, that’s the killer. It was a lovely time at the salon. I get a visit from at least one of the staff most weeks.’

Charities warned that some people were forced to work well into retirement to boost poor pension incomes.

Janet Morrison, of the charity Independen­t Age, said: ‘We need to ensure that working for longer doesn’t come at the cost of older workers’ health.’

‘Physically and mentally active’

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