The substantial rise in the proportion of elderly (65+) people in the British population over the last hundred years has been matched by a dramatic fall in labour-force participation rates among the elderly. Some commentators see the reduction in work opportunities for the eldery and their increasing reliance on state pensions to avoid poverty as a deliberate construct of successive governments. This paper shows that the economic dependency of the elderly is more clearly a function of long-established employment practices and patterns of asset accumulation. Information drawn from the decennial censuses since 1881 on the occupations of elderly males shows a consistent marginalization of elderly workers in low-wage, low-status occupations. Data on asset-holdings demonstrate that the elderly have a high probability of spending their last years in poverty. This casts doubt on the appropriateness of the life-cycle savings model as a description of the savings behaviour of most workers in 20th century Britain.
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Paper provided by C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers in its series CEPR Discussion Papers with number
47.
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