The United States civilian labor force is projected to increase by 12.8 million over the 2006-2016 decade, reaching 164.2 million by 2016. This is according to data released by the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics.
This 8.5 percent increase is less than the 13.1 percent increase over the previous decade — 1996 to 2006 — when the labor force grew by 17.5 million.
The number of workers in the 55-and-older group is projected to grow by 46.7 percent, nearly 5.5 times the 8.5 percent growth projected for the labor force overall.
Youths — those between the ages of 16 and 24 — will decline in numbers and will see their share of the labor force fall from 14.8 to 12.7 percent. The number of prime-age workers — those between the ages of 25 and 54 — will increase by 2.4 percent, but their share of the labor force will decline from 68.4 to 64.6 percent.
These projections are from the BLS Employment Projections program. For more information, see "Employment Projections: 2006-16," news release USDL 07-1847.
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