Older, better-educated workers account for Europe's jobs growth: ECB

​Pension reform keeps citizens in labour market longer

Older, better-educated workers account for Europe's jobs growth: ECB
People stroll at the Christmas market near the Frauenkirche (Church of Our Lady) in Dresden, Germany, on Dec. 9. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

FRANKFURT (Reuters) — Older, better-educated workers accounted for the vast majority of the euro zone's employment growth in recent years, suggesting that pension reform is forcing workers to stay in the labour market longer, the European Central Bank said on Thursday.

With Europe's population ageing rapidly, the labour force could shrink in the coming decades, placing a growing burden on government finances as the ratio of pensioners to active workers is already at a record high.

The euro zone has added about 9.6 million jobs since its 2013 employment trough. Close to three-quarters of these have been filled by workers between 55 and 74, up from less than a third in the decade before the bloc's crisis, the ECB said in an Economic Bulletin article.

"Demographics and pension reforms are likely the main explanatory factors underlying changes in the age breakdown of employment growth," the ECB said.

So called 'prime age' workers — those between 25 and 54 — accounted for only about a fifth of the employment gain during the same period, down from about two-thirds in the years preceding the crisis.

There are now about three workers for each pensioner, already a record low, and this is expected to fall to a ratio of two to one by the middle of the century, according to European Commission projections.

The ECB added that Germany accounted for a significantly larger share of employment growth than before the crisis, while the relative share of others like Italy and Spain has dropped.

The study also noted that workers who completed post-secondary education accounted for almost 80 per cent of the employment growth in the recovery, up from about 60 per cent in the pre-crisis years. 

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