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SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
The proportion of men and women who were not in the labour force varied according to age. In the 15-19 year age group, where there are high levels of participation in education, 43% of men and 40% of women were not in the labour force. In each of the remaining age groups there was a higher proportion of women than men not in the labour force. The proportion of men not in the labour force was lowest for those aged 25-34 years and 35-44 years (each 7%), and highest for those aged 70 years and over (93%). The proportion of women not in the labour force was lowest for those aged 20-24 years (21%) and 45-54 years (22%) and highest for those aged 70 years and over (98%). There were 845,400 people with marginal attachment to the labour force in September 2007, representing 15% of people not in the labour force. People without marginal attachment to the labour force numbered 4.6 million in September 2007, representing 85% of people not in the labour force.
Characteristics Of the 845,400 people with marginal attachment to the labour force:
Of women with marginal attachment to the labour force, 65% preferred part-time work, while 16% preferred full-time work. For men, 46% preferred part-time work and 30% preferred full-time work. The remainder had no preference, or were undecided. Main activity when not in the labour force For people with marginal attachment to the labour force, the most commonly reported main activity when not in the labour force was 'home duties or caring for children' (61% of women and 11% of men), followed by 'attending an educational institution' (39% of men and 19% of women). Last job In September 2007, 679,300 of those with marginal attachment to the labour force had previously had a job. Of these, 33% reported that their last job was less than 12 months ago, and 22% reported their last job was between one and three years ago.
Of those people with marginal attachment to the labour force who had a job less than 20 years ago, 52% reported that their last job was full-time. Some 84% of the 41,900 who reported their occupation in last job was 'Manager' reported they worked full-time in that job, compared to 32% of the 90,000 people who reported 'Sales workers'. PERSONS WITH MARGINAL ATTACHMENT, LAST JOB LESS THAN 20 YEARS AGO, Selected main reasons for ceasing last job - By sex Men and women reported different reasons for ceasing their last job. The most commonly reported main reason for men whose last job was less than 20 years ago was 'retrenched, made redundant, employer went out of business, dismissed, no work was available' (22%), followed by 'own long-term health condition or disability' (13%) and 'job was temporary or seasonal' (11%). While for women, the most commonly reported main reason was 'pregnancy or to have children' (31%), followed by 'retrenched, made redundant, employer went out of business, dismissed, no work was available' (11%) and 'to have holidays, moved house or spouse transferred' (9%). Of women reporting 'pregnancy or to have children', 82% were aged 25-44 years.
The main reason most commonly reported by discouraged job seekers for not actively looking for work was 'considered too old by employers' (47%). This was followed by 'no jobs in locality or line of work' and 'lacked necessary training, skills or experience' (each 20%). 'Considered too old by employers' was reported as the main reason by 51% of male discouraged job seekers, compared with 44% of female discouraged job seekers. PERSONS NOT ACTIVELY LOOKING FOR WORK, DISCOURAGED JOB SEEKERS, Main reason for not actively looking for work - By sex Not actively looking for work - Other reasons There were 701,700 people (83% of all people with marginal attachment to the labour force) other than discouraged job seekers, who wanted to work and were available to start work within four weeks but were not actively looking for work. Of these, 66% (465,800) were women and 34% (235,900) were men.
PERSONS NOT ACTIVELY LOOKING FOR WORK, OTHER REASONS, Selected main reasons for not actively looking for work - By sex WITHOUT MARGINAL ATTACHMENT TO THE LABOUR FORCE The majority of people not in the labour force are without marginal attachment. In September 2007, there were 4.6 million people (1.9 million men and 2.8 million women) aged 15 years and over without marginal attachment to the labour force.
Characteristics Of those without marginal attachment to the labour force:
Main activity when not in the labour force Over one-third (36%) of people without marginal attachment reported their main activity when not in the labour force as 'retired or voluntarily inactive'. The second most common response was 'home duties or caring for children' (26%). The most common response reported by men without marginal attachment was 'retired or voluntarily inactive' (45%) followed by 'own long-term health condition or disability' (18%) and 'attending an educational institution' (17%). Women without marginal attachment most commonly reported 'home duties and caring for children' (39%) and 'retired or voluntarily inactive' (30%) as their main activity when not in the labour force. Of the 1.7 million people without marginal attachment to the labour force who reported 'retired or voluntarily inactive' as their main activity when not in the labour force, 81% (82% of men and 80% of women) were aged 65 years and over.
In September 2007, of those without marginal attachment to the labour force:
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