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Aging in an Aging Society Brief demographic overview

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Title: Aging in an Aging Society Brief demographic overview


1
Aging in an Aging SocietyBrief demographic
overview
  • Age in America Symposium, January 31, 2008
  • Victor W. Marshall, PhD
  • Director
  • UNC Institute on Aging
  • Victor_marshall_at_unc.edu

2
Outline
  • The Aging of America
  • Diversity of the Older Population
  • The Changing Meaning of Age in Home, Work, and
    Community

3
THE AGING OF AMERICA Three Factors Affect the
Age Structure of any Population
  • Birth Rates (which have fallen)
  • Life Expectancy (which has increased)
  • Immigration and Migration Rates

4
U.S. Population Pyramids
1990
2025
2050
Age
Percent Male (blue) and Female (green)
Source of charts US Census Bureau
5
Declining Fertility
  • US completed fertility higher than most
    industrialized countries (about 1.9)
  • But has declined (from 3.1 in 1975)
  • Hispanic womens birth rate 66 higher than
    non-hispanic white women (96.9/1000 aged
    15-44 versus 58.5)
  • Source US Census Bureau

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70 million
35 million
21 million
3 million
4.2 million
8
Increases in the Oldest OldU.S. Population Aged
85 (millions)
Source of data U.S. Census Bureau, We the
American Elderly, September 1993.
9
Percentage of Americans Age 65 Expected to
Survive Age 90
Source of data US Census Bureau
10
Living to 100Number of Centenarians in the U.S.
24 of all elderly
10 of all elderly
Source of data US Census Bureau, Current
Populations Reports, P23-199RV, July 1999
11
Population Changes
  • According to Census Bureau projections, the
    elderly population will more than double between
    now and the year 2050, to 80 million.
  • Much of this growth is attributed to the "baby
    boom" generation which will enter their elderly
    years between 2010 and 2030.
  • The most populous States are also the ones with
    the largest number of elderly. However, the
    States with the greatest proportion of elderly
    are generally different from those with the
    greatest number.

Source of data US Census Bureau
12
Gender, Race, Class, and Health Differentiation
  • Elderly women outnumber elderly men.
  • The elderly are becoming more racially and
    ethnically diverse.
  • Poverty rates rise with advancing age.
  • Great variability by health status

13
Women Live LongerU.S. Population by Gender and
Age (2000)
All Ages
Age 65
Age 85
Male48.9
Male30.1
Male41.6
Female51.1
Female58.4
Female69.9
Source of data US Census Bureau, Resident
Population Estimates of the United States by Age
and Sex, 2000
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15
Older Women More Likely to Live AloneLiving
Arrangements of Older Adults in U.S. (1998)
WOMEN
MEN
Source of data US Census Bureau, Current
Population Survey, P20-514, March 1998
16
Differences in Life ExpectanciesAt Age 65 (1998)
Source of data National Vital Statistics Report,
Vol. 47, No. 13, December 24, 1998
17
Projected ChangesRacial Background of U.S.
Elderly (2050)
Note Persons of Hispanic origin may be of any
race. Source of data U.S. Census Bureau, We
the American Elderly, September 1993.
18
Income, 65 Households
Source Civic Ventures Fact Sheet on Older
Americans
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20
Change in Median Net Worth of 65 Households
1984 - 2001
  • 1984
  • Average 98,900
  • Whites 113,400
  • Blacks 25,600
  • 2001
  • Average 179,800
  • Whites 205,000
  • Blacks 41,000

Source Panel Study of Income Dynamics
21
Older Adults More Likely to Have Disabilities
Source of data Current Population Reports,
Americans with Disabilities, 1994-95, P70-61,
August 1997.
22
http//www.census.gov
23
Factors Related to Older Peoples Engagement in
the Three Spheres
  • HOME
  • CAREGIVING will place increasing strain on baby
    boomers and younger old people

24
Value and Cost of Informal Caregiving
  • 12.8 million Americans need care
  • 7.3 million are 65 and older
  • The value of informal caregiving is estimated at
    196 billion per year
  • Informal caregiving exceeds nursing home and home
    care expenses by 81 billion
  • Caregiving costs U.S. businesses 11.4 billion
    annually
  • Caregivers lose up to 659,139 over a lifetime

Geriatric Social Work Initiative, San Jose State
University, College of Social Work
25
Factors Related to Older Peoples Engagement in
the Three Spheres
  • WORK
  • LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION is increasing at older
    ages and policy thrusts will increase it more

26
Reimagining America AARPs Blueprint for the
Future. 2005
27
By 2045, older workers add 3 trillion/yr (9) to
GDP
28
Factors Related to Older Peoples Engagement in
the Three Spheres
  • COMMUNITY
  • Volunteering, but also work in paid employment is
    higher with increased education

29
Older Adults as Volunteers
  •  

Source Independent Sector, Americas Senior
Volunteers, June 2000
30
What the Demographic Data Tell Us
  • The population is aging and the older adult
    population is the fastest growing sector
  • Older adults becoming more racially and
    ethnically diverse.

31
What the Demographic Data Tell Us
  • Additional sources of diversity such as
    education, health, and family status suggest a
    highly variable constituency for libraries and
    museums and for civic engagement initiatives
  • The majority of older adults report good health
    and many are able to work and contribute to
    family and society

32
What the Demographic Data Fail to Tell Us
  • Age means different things to different subgroups
  • The meaning of age is changing rapidly

33
How Old Was Whistlers Mother When Painted?
34
How Old Was Whistlers Mother When Painted?
  • Born in 1804
  • Painted in 1871
  • She was 67 years old when painted

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38
Inuit and Cree EldersPencil portraits by Gerald
Kuehlwww.portraintsofthenorth.com
  • Elissapee Tunnuq, Baker Lake, Nunavut, b.1928,
    volunteers youth camps, passing on traditional
    knowledge
  • Mariano Aupilardjuk, Rankin Inlet, Nunavut, b.
    1923. Travels across Canada teaching traditional
    knowledge to young people
  • Lottie Moore, Cree, Nelson House, Manitoba, 104
    yrs old, raised many children in addition to her
    own

39
Acknowledgments
  • Danielle Borasky, Associate Director for Library
    and Information Services, UNC Institute on Aging,
    and the Digital Carousel on the IOA website
  • Mary Altpeter, Associate Director for Program
    Development, UNC Institute on Aging
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