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  • Axios Phoenix

    Arizona has one of America's smallest 65+ workforces

    By Kavya BeherajJeremy DudaAlex Fitzpatrick,

    2024-07-17

    Data: BLS ; Map: Kavya Beheraj/Axios

    Arizona has one of the largest senior populations in the U.S., but one of its smallest workforces of people 65 or older.

    The big picture: Only 15% of Arizonans ages 65 and up were working in 2023, according to preliminary census data for that year.


    • That's well below the national average of 18.7%.
    • Arizona's population people 65+ is lower than all but three states: West Virginia (13.3), Mississippi (13.6) and Arkansas (14.6).
    • Vermont (25.6%), Iowa (23.9%) and Maryland (23.4%) have the highest share of 65-and-up adults in the workforce .

    Between the lines: The 2024 presidential campaign between Joe Biden and Donald Trump is sparking a fresh conversation about age, ability and mental acuity.

    Context: Arizona's low number belies its reputation as a haven for seniors.

    • The state has one of the highest percentages of senior populations in the U.S. at 18.3%.
    • According to U.S. Census data from 2021, the percentage of Arizona's population that was 65 and older was higher than all but 13 states.

    Jeremy's thought bubble: I was initially surprised to see Arizona rank so low in the percentage of working seniors, but it made more sense once I started to think about it.

    • Arizona has long had a reputation as a retirement destination.
    • Seniors move to retirement communities like Sun City from the Midwest and East Coast to enjoy their golden years, not because they came to Arizona for a new job.

    Zoom out: Fewer older Americans are working now compared to the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Axios' Emily Peck reports.

    • Today's older workers are better educated, working more hours, and more likely to be receiving employer benefits, compared to past decades, per a 2023 Pew Research Center report .

    Yes, but: The share of older adults in the workforce has been generally rising since the late 1980s, Emily writes.

    • That's in part because of changes to Social Security and retirement plans, and in part because medical advances are extending Americans' lives and their time in the workforce.

    Context: America is getting older , and people 65 and older are expected to make up 20% of the country's population by 2030 and 23% by 2050.

    • In 2022 that number was 17%, per census data.
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