FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
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CB05-67 | |||
Mike Bergman | Customer Response Team | ||
Public Information Office | PA Department of Labor & Industry | ||
(301) 763-3030/457-3670 (fax) | Center for Workforce Information | ||
(301) 457-1037 (TDD) | & Analysis | ||
e-mail: <pio@census.gov> | 1-877-493-3282 or (717) 787-6466 | ||
e-mail: workforceinfo@state.pa.us | |||
Census Bureau Releases Analysis |
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In 2002, about 37 percent of working Pennsylvanians were age 45 or older, an increase from 33 percent in 1998, the U.S. Census Bureau said today. The share of the Keystone State’s workers who were age 65 or older increased slightly over the period, from 3.0 percent to 3.4 percent. The analysis of Pennsylvania’s older work force is based on the Local Employment Dynamics (LED) program <http://lehd.dsd.census.gov>. The report, A Profile of Older Workers in Pennsylvania [PDF], highlights the age composition of the state’s work force, job gains and losses for older workers by industry, industries in which older workers are concentrated and their job stability and earnings. “With these new data we can see trends develop each quarter within a state or substate area, in which industries the changes occur and the characteristics of workers involved in the changes,” Census Bureau Director Louis Kincannon said. “These indicators give insight into Pennsylvania’s economy and how dynamic its communities are.” Some highlights from the Pennsylvania report:
The LED program consists of individual partnerships between 37 states, the District of Columbia and the Census Bureau. Reports prepared jointly with the partner states on a variety of topics will be released over the upcoming months. The Department of Health and Human Services’ National Institute on Aging, a component of the National Institutes of Health, funded the reports on older workers. In addition, quarterly work force indicators on such subjects as job creation and new hires are currently available for Pennsylvania and several other partner states for selected years, age groups and geographic areas, as well as for men and women, at <http://lehd.dsd.census.gov>. Because the statistics come from a variety of sources including state administrative records, they are not directly comparable with statistics from household surveys such as the decennial census long form, the American Community Survey and the Current Population Survey. Industries are organized by the Standard Industrial Classification system. The LED program also produces data using the North American Industry Classification System. As in all data-estimation processes, the results are subject to error arising from data processing or incomplete records. The Census Bureau uses a variety of procedures to minimize such errors. - X -
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