Female labour force projections using microsimulation for six EU countries

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Female labour force projections using microsimulation for six EU countries Matteo Richiardi a b c ( ) Lia Pacelli c Ambra Poggi d Ross Richardson a a Institute for New Economic Thinking, University of Oxford b Collegio Carlo Alberto and Nuffield College c University of Torino d University of Milan Bicocca Research funded by Eurofound - European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions, and supported by a Marie Curie Intra European Fellowship within the 7th European Community Framework Programme. INAPP, Rome, 21 February 2017 1

A shrinking workforce... Compared to 1970, an average EU citizen now lives about 10 years more and works 10 years less: 2

A shrinking workforce... Compared to 1970, an average EU citizen now lives about 10 years more and works 10 years less: Life expectancy up approximately from 70 to 80. 2

A shrinking workforce... Compared to 1970, an average EU citizen now lives about 10 years more and works 10 years less: Life expectancy up approximately from 70 to 80. Mean years of education up approximately from 6 to 11. 2

A shrinking workforce... Compared to 1970, an average EU citizen now lives about 10 years more and works 10 years less: Life expectancy up approximately from 70 to 80. Mean years of education up approximately from 6 to 11. Retirement age down approximately from 68 to 63. graph 2

A shrinking workforce... Compared to 1970, an average EU citizen now lives about 10 years more and works 10 years less: Life expectancy up approximately from 70 to 80. Mean years of education up approximately from 6 to 11. Retirement age down approximately from 68 to 63. Further, demographic change is accelerating: the old age dependency ratio (the ratio of people aged 65 and over to people aged 15-64), which is now below 30%, is expected to rise to approximately 50% by 2050. graph 2

A shrinking workforce... Compared to 1970, an average EU citizen now lives about 10 years more and works 10 years less: Life expectancy up approximately from 70 to 80. Mean years of education up approximately from 6 to 11. Retirement age down approximately from 68 to 63. Further, demographic change is accelerating: the old age dependency ratio (the ratio of people aged 65 and over to people aged 15-64), which is now below 30%, is expected to rise to approximately 50% by 2050. These dynamics create temporal imbalances in the labour market and put strains on welfare system and younger workers, who will be responsible for supporting an ageing society. graph 2

...requires higher participation rates Female LF participation: 70.9%. Range: 56.8% (IT) 84.2 % (SE). Gender participation gap: 12 ppt. Range: 22.7 ppt (IT) 3.4 ppt (FI). Gender participation gap, 20-64 3

Country selection Participation sub-index of the Gender Equality Index 4

Model structure 5

Modules specification 6

Data Estimation sample: EU-SILC longitudinal 2005-2011. Initial populations: EU-SILC cross-sectional 2012. Simulation: 2013-2050. Individuals enter the simulation at age 17 (first age observed in EU-SILC data is 16). 7

Baseline: participation rates 8

Baseline: comparison 9

Baseline drivers scenarios Swedish demograhy : Evolution of the demographic structure by age and gender as in Sweden. 10

Baseline drivers scenarios Swedish demograhy : Evolution of the demographic structure by age and gender as in Sweden. Swedish education : Distribution of educational attainments is the same as in Sweden. 10

Baseline drivers scenarios Swedish demograhy : Evolution of the demographic structure by age and gender as in Sweden. Swedish education : Distribution of educational attainments is the same as in Sweden. Swedish participation : All covariates have the same effect as in Sweden, with respect to participation. Aim: disentangle the effects of individual characteristics from composition effects: Differences in outcomes must be attributed to composition effects only. 10

Results: Baseline drivers /1 Females, 20-64 11

Results: Baseline drivers /2 Females, 20-44 12

Results: Baseline drivers /3 The low female participation rates in the countries under analysis can be explained mainly by an adverse behaviour of older women (even after controlling for differences in individual characteristics). Moreover, in most countries the behaviour of younger women is not detrimental to participation, their lower educational attainments are only partly responsible for the participation gap, and demography does not helping either in explaining it. The last source of the participation gap for women in childbearing years in the model is the role of family-friendly policies, and in particular the presence of public, affordable childcare, paid parental leave, and part-time opportunities. 13

Results: Enhanced family policies 14

Conclusions The Europe 2020 target of 75% employment rate will be approached by the low-participation countries no sooner than 2050. graph 15

Conclusions The Europe 2020 target of 75% employment rate will be approached by the low-participation countries no sooner than 2050. graph There is a trend of increasing participation rates, mainly related to the exit of older cohorts up to 2030. 15

Conclusions The Europe 2020 target of 75% employment rate will be approached by the low-participation countries no sooner than 2050. graph There is a trend of increasing participation rates, mainly related to the exit of older cohorts up to 2030. These projections are not too dissimilar from other forecasting exercises in the literature. However, the microsimulation approach permits a finer disaggregation of the results, which turns out to be crucial in understanding the dynamic causal mechanisms at work. 15

Conclusions The Europe 2020 target of 75% employment rate will be approached by the low-participation countries no sooner than 2050. graph There is a trend of increasing participation rates, mainly related to the exit of older cohorts up to 2030. These projections are not too dissimilar from other forecasting exercises in the literature. However, the microsimulation approach permits a finer disaggregation of the results, which turns out to be crucial in understanding the dynamic causal mechanisms at work. There is strong persistence: choices about labour market participation made in the past by older women, in a different cultural and political context with respect to the current one, are embedded in the participation rates observed today and very little can be done to offset their long-lasting effects. 15

Conclusions The Europe 2020 target of 75% employment rate will be approached by the low-participation countries no sooner than 2050. graph There is a trend of increasing participation rates, mainly related to the exit of older cohorts up to 2030. These projections are not too dissimilar from other forecasting exercises in the literature. However, the microsimulation approach permits a finer disaggregation of the results, which turns out to be crucial in understanding the dynamic causal mechanisms at work. There is strong persistence: choices about labour market participation made in the past by older women, in a different cultural and political context with respect to the current one, are embedded in the participation rates observed today and very little can be done to offset their long-lasting effects. By converse, the labour market behaviour of younger women in most countries is not too different from their counterparts in Sweden. 15

Conclusions The Europe 2020 target of 75% employment rate will be approached by the low-participation countries no sooner than 2050. graph There is a trend of increasing participation rates, mainly related to the exit of older cohorts up to 2030. These projections are not too dissimilar from other forecasting exercises in the literature. However, the microsimulation approach permits a finer disaggregation of the results, which turns out to be crucial in understanding the dynamic causal mechanisms at work. There is strong persistence: choices about labour market participation made in the past by older women, in a different cultural and political context with respect to the current one, are embedded in the participation rates observed today and very little can be done to offset their long-lasting effects. By converse, the labour market behaviour of younger women in most countries is not too different from their counterparts in Sweden. The reason of their persistently low participation rates in these countries has to be searched in the lack of adequate family policies and in the limited opportunities for family-work conciliation for younger women. 15

Thank you for your attention. matteo.richiardi@maths.ox.ac.uk 16

Baseline: employment rates back 17

Average effective retirement age back 18

Average effective retirement age case studies, males back 19

Average effective retirement age case studies, females back 20