This dataset contains annual labour market statistics with gender composition of part-time employment and standardised age groups (15-24, 25-54, 55-64, 65+, total). Part-time employment is based on national definitions. Data are expressed as percentages.
Bibliographic citation:
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development: Labour Market Statistics: Incidence of Full-Time/Part-Time Employment Based on National Definitions, OECD Employment and Labour Market Statistics. UK Data Service. http://dx.doi.org/10.5257/oecd/labour/2018-10
Yearly
Annually
Annual
1966-2017
Data are expressed in percentages.
This table contains incidences and gender composition of part-time employment with standardised (15-24, 25-54, 55-64, 65 plus, total) and detailed age groups. Data are further broken down by professional status - employees, total employment. Part-time employment is based on national definitions.
The definition of part-time work varies considerably across OECD countries. Essentially three main approaches can be distinguished: i) a classification based on the worker's perception of his or her employment situation; ii) a cut-off (generally 30 or 35 hours per week) based on usual working hours, with persons usually working fewer hours being considered part-timers; iii) a comparable cut-off based on actual hours worked during the reference week. A criterion based on actual hours will generally yield a part-time rate higher than one based on usual hours, particularly if there are temporary reductions in working time as a result of holidays, illness, short-timing, etc. On the other hand, it is not entirely clear whether a classification based on the worker's perception will necessarily yield estimates of part-time work that are higher or lower than one based on a fixed cut-off. In one country (France) which changed from 1981 to 1982 from a definition based on an actual hours cut-off (30 hours) to one based on the respondent's perception, the latter criterion appeared to produce slightly higher estimates.
Cross-national; National
OECD countries
This table contains data on full-time and part-time employment based on national definition. Data are broken down by professional status - employees, total employment - sex and standardised age groups (15-24, 25-54, 55+, total).
For detailed information on labour force surveys for all countries please see the attached file:
Copyright Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
The OECD has specified that registration is not required. Effective July 15th 2015, the UK Data Service made access to OECD online statistics databases free to all users via UKDS.Stat.
UK Data Service Guide to OECD Employment and Labour Market Statistics
This dataset contains annual labour market statistics with gender composition of part-time employment and standardised age groups (15-24, 25-54, 55-64, 65+, total). Part-time employment is based on national definitions. Data are expressed as percentages.
Bibliographic citation:
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development: Labour Market Statistics: Incidence of Full-Time/Part-Time Employment Based on National Definitions, OECD Employment and Labour Market Statistics. UK Data Service. http://dx.doi.org/10.5257/oecd/labour/2018-10
Yearly
Data are expressed in percentages.
This table contains incidences and gender composition of part-time employment with standardised (15-24, 25-54, 55-64, 65 plus, total) and detailed age groups. Data are further broken down by professional status - employees, total employment. Part-time employment is based on national definitions.
The definition of part-time work varies considerably across OECD countries. Essentially three main approaches can be distinguished: i) a classification based on the worker's perception of his or her employment situation; ii) a cut-off (generally 30 or 35 hours per week) based on usual working hours, with persons usually working fewer hours being considered part-timers; iii) a comparable cut-off based on actual hours worked during the reference week. A criterion based on actual hours will generally yield a part-time rate higher than one based on usual hours, particularly if there are temporary reductions in working time as a result of holidays, illness, short-timing, etc. On the other hand, it is not entirely clear whether a classification based on the worker's perception will necessarily yield estimates of part-time work that are higher or lower than one based on a fixed cut-off. In one country (France) which changed from 1981 to 1982 from a definition based on an actual hours cut-off (30 hours) to one based on the respondent's perception, the latter criterion appeared to produce slightly higher estimates.
Annual
1966-2017
Annually
This table contains data on full-time and part-time employment based on national definition. Data are broken down by professional status - employees, total employment - sex and standardised age groups (15-24, 25-54, 55+, total).
Cross-national; National
OECD countries
For detailed information on labour force surveys for all countries please see the attached file:
UK Data Service Guide to OECD Employment and Labour Market Statistics
Copyright Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
The OECD has specified that registration is not required. Effective July 15th 2015, the UK Data Service made access to OECD online statistics databases free to all users via UKDS.Stat.