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April 10, 2014

Reasons for the Decline in Prime-Age Labor Force Participation

Editor's note: Since this post was written, we have developed new tools for examining labor market trends. For a more detailed
examination of factors affecting labor force participation rates, please visit our Labor Force Participation Dynamics web page, where
you can create your own charts and download data.
As a follow up to this post on recent trends in labor force participation, we look specifically at the prime-age group of 25- to 54-yearolds. The participation decisions of this age cohort are less affected by the aging population and the longer-term trend toward lower
participation of youths because of rising school enrollment rates. In that sense, they give us a cleaner window on responses of
participation to changing business cycle conditions.
The labor force participation rate of the prime-age group fell from 83 percent just before the Great Recession to 81 percent in 2013.
The participation rate of prime-age males has been trending down since the 1960s. The participation rate of women, which had been
rising for most of the post-World War II period, appears to have plateaued in the 1990s and has more recently shared the declining
pattern of participation for prime-age men. But the decline in participation for both groups appears to have accelerated between 2007
and 2013 (see chart 1).

We look at the various reasons people cite for not participating in the labor force from the monthly Current Population Survey. These
reasons give us some insight into the impact of changes in employment conditions since 2007 on labor force participation. The data
on those not in the official labor force can be broken into two broad categories: those who say they don't currently want a job and
those who say they do want a job but don't satisfy the active search criteria for being in the official labor force. Of the prime-age
population not in the labor force, most say they don't currently want a job. At the end of 2007, about 15 percent of 25- to 54-year-olds
said they didn't want a job, and slightly fewer than 2 percent said they did want a job. By the end of 2013, the don't-want-a-job share
had reached nearly 17 percent, and the want-a-job share had risen to slightly above 2 percent (see chart 2).

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Prime-Age Nonparticipation: Currently Want a Job
Most of the rise in the share of the prime-age population in the want-a-job category is due to so-called marginally attached
individuals—they are available and want a job, have looked for a job in the past year, but haven't looked in the past four weeks—
especially those who say they are not currently looking because they have become discouraged about job-finding prospects (see the
blue and orange lines of chart 3). In 2013, there were about 1.1 million prime-age marginally attached individuals compared to 0.7
million in 2007, and the prime-age marginally attached accounted for about half of all marginally attached in the population.

The marginally attached are aptly named in the sense that they have a reasonably high propensity to reenter the labor force—more
than 40 percent are in the labor force in the next month and more than 50 percent are in the labor force 12 months later (see chart
4). This macroblog post discusses what the relative stability in the flow rate from marginally attached to the labor force means for
thinking about the amount of slack labor resources in the economy.

Prime-Age Nonparticipation: Currently Don't Want a Job
As chart 2 makes evident, the vast majority of the rise in prime-age nonparticipation since 2009 is due to the increase in those
saying they do not currently want a job. The largest contributors to the increase are individuals who say they are too ill or disabled to
work or who are in school or training (see the orange and blues lines in chart 5).

Those who say they don't want a job because they are disabled have a relatively low propensity to subsequently (re)enter the labor
force. So if the trend of rising disability persists, it will put further downward pressure on prime-age participation. Those who say they
don't currently want a job because they are in school or training have a much greater likelihood of (re)entering the labor force,
although this tendency has declined slightly since 2007 (see chart 6).

Note that the number of people in the Current Population Survey citing disability as the reason for not currently wanting a job is not
the same as either the number of people applying for or receiving social security disability insurance. However, a similar trend has
been evident in overall disability insurance applications and enrollments (see here).
Some of the rise in the share of prime-age individuals who say they don't want a job could be linked to erosion of skills resulting from
prolonged unemployment or permanent changes in the composition of demand (a different mix of skills and job descriptions). It is
likely that the rise in share of prime-age individuals not currently wanting a job because they are in school or in training is partly a
response to the perception of inadequate skills. The increase in recent years is evident across all ages until about age 50 but is
especially strong among the youngest prime-age individuals (see chart 7).

But lack of required skills is not the only plausible explanation for the rise in the share of prime-age individuals who say they don't

currently want a job. For instance, the increased incidence of disability is partly due to changes in the age distribution within the
prime-age category. The share of the prime-age population between 50 and 54 years old—the tail of the baby boomer cohort—has
increased significantly (see chart 8).

This increase is important because the incidence of reported disability within the prime-age population increases with age and has
become more common in recent years, especially for those older than 45 (see chart 9).

Conclusions
The health of the labor market clearly affects the decision of prime-age individuals to enroll in school or training, apply for disability
insurance, or stay home and take care of family. Discouragement over job prospects rose during the Great Recession, causing many
unemployed people to drop out of the labor force. The rise in the number of prime-age marginally attached workers reflects this trend
and can account for some of the decline in participation between 2007 and 2009.
But most of the postrecession rise in prime-age nonparticipation is from the people who say they don't currently want a job. How
much does that increase reflect trends established well before the recession, and how much can be attributed to the recession and
slow recovery? It's hard to say with much certainty. For example, participation by prime-age men has been on a secular decline for
decades, but the pace accelerated after 2007—see here for more discussion.
Undoubtedly, some people will reenter the labor market as it strengthens further, especially those who left to undertake additional
training. But for others, the prospect of not finding a satisfactory job will cause them to continue to stay out of the labor market. The
increased incidence of disability reported among prime-age individuals suggests permanent detachment from the labor market and
will put continued downward pressure on participation if the trend continues. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that the primeage participation rate will stabilize around its 2013 level. Given all the contradictory factors in play, we think this projection should
have a pretty wide confidence interval around it.
Note: All data shown are 12-month moving averages to emphasize persistent shifts in trends.
By Melinda Pitts, director, Center for Human Capital Studies,
John Robertson, a vice president and senior economist in the Atlanta Fed's research department, and
Ellyn Terry, a senior economic analyst in the Atlanta Fed's research department
April 10, 2014 in Business Cycles, Employment, Labor Markets | Permalink