This table contains figures on employment rate, employment relationship, jobs and benefits from individuals to the different birth generations. This makes it possible to compare generations with each other. For example, women born between 1935-1939 at the age of 35 worked an average of 32 hours per week. Women born between 1970-1974 worked an average of 28 hours per week at the age of 35. The figures are presented as percentages and averages. Furthermore, the figures in this table are special by gender and age. The figures come from the Labour Force Survey (EBB), the Labour Force Counts (AKT) and the Social Statistical File (SSB).
Data available from: birth Generation 1905-1909 to 1995-1999
Status of the figures
The figures in this table are final.
Changes as of 31 March 2016:
None, this table has been discontinued.
When are new figures coming?
No longer applicable. This table is followed by Labour; Key figures birth generation from 1910-1914. See paragraph 3. New revised tables on the labour force were published on 26 February 2015. This revision of the statistics of the labour force has two parts. The definitions have been adapted to the internationally agreed definitions and data collection has been improved by being the first statistical office in Europe to survey via the Internet. For more information on the revision, see the link to the press release in paragraph 3.
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