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Are more elderly South Dakotans working?

Are more elderly South Dakotans working?

Yahoo16-02-2025

This story is reported by , a non-profit news organization. Find more in-depth reporting at .
A growing number of South Dakotans continue to work past retirement age.
In 2018, a quarter of South Dakotans 65 and older were in the labor force. Five years later, that number climbed to 29%, above the national rate of 19%.
Bill to end child marriage in SD clears first hurdle
As of July 2024, 18% of South Dakotans were 65 and older. That's up from 14% in 2010.
From 2000-2020 the nationwide share of workers 60 and older doubled, due in part to the aging population and falling birth rates.
Other contributing factors include employers shifting away from pension type retirement plans, which encourage workers to retire at a specific age, and the Social Security system raising the age for when workers can receive full benefits from 65 to 67.
This fact brief responds to conversations such as this one.
South Dakota Department of Labor, 2018 Workforce Report
South Dakota Department of Labor, 2023 Workforce Report
United States Census, Population 65 and Older 2024
United States Census, Population 65 and Older 2010
National Academies, Understanding the Aging Workforce
Pew Research Center, The growth of the older workforce
South Dakota News Watch partners with Gigafact, a nonprofit network of nonpartisan newsrooms, to verify trending claims through fact briefs. Read previous fact briefs and our verification standards and other best practices policies.
Have a question we can answer? Submit it at the South Dakota News Watch Tipline. Send questions or feedback to factbrief@sdnewswatch.org.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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