“…During the 1940s-1980s, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, a unit of the United States Department of Labor, was considered to be a trendsetter in this regard: the Bureau developed a standard method for working life table construction which was later used in other countries and international organisations (Durand, 1948;Fullerton, 1972;Garfinkle, 1963;Smith, 1982;Wolfbein, 1949). Nowadays, studies on working life expectancy have been conducted for the United States (Dudel & Myrskylä, 2017;Hayward & Grady, 1990;Millimet et al, 2010Millimet et al, , 2003Skoog & Ciecka, 2010;Smith, 1986), Finland (Leinonen et al, 2015;Nurminen, 2012;Nurminen et al, 2005), Great Britain (Butt et al, 2008;Haberman & Bloom, 1990), Netherlands (Liefbroer & Henkens, 1999), Denmark (Hoem, 1977), Canada (Denton et al, 2010), Spain (Dudel et al, 2018) etc. Since 2014 the working life expectancy has been included into the official reports of the EU Member States as an indicator for analysis and monitoring under the Europe 2020 employment strategy.…”