Title: Project 2030 Update The Aging of Minnesota
1Project 2030 UpdateThe Aging of Minnesotas
Population
- Implications for Action
- October 2002
2Project 2030 Update
- Presentation
- Demographic realities
- Implications
- Action needed to meet challenges
3Minnesotas Population by Age Group Percent
Change 1990 - 2000
4Minnesotans 65 will more than double between
2000 and 2050, rising to 1.6 million.
5Minnesotans 65 remain in the labor force at
higher than expected rates.
Source 2000 projections and 2000 Census
6The Good News
- 1.3 million Minnesotans 65 by 2030.
- Nearly 25 of the population.
- Largest untapped human resource in the state.
- Individuals are continuing to work in
retirement. - Vital Aging will be in vogue.
7Minnesotans age 85 will more than triple in the
next 50 years.
8The number of Minnesotans 65 living alone with
more than double between 2000 and 2030.
9Families provide 95 of all care needed by older
persons. One-third of boomers will not have
children available.
Who provides care for frail older persons in 2000
10Family support will be reduced by 2030.
Friends, neighbors and voluntary agencies must
assume bigger role.
Who provides care for frail older persons in 2030?
11Caregiver ratios are already high in many
counties, and will grow higher.
Caregiver Ratio number 85/number females 45-64
(2000 Census)
12The Not So Good News
- 165,000 Minnesotans 85 in 2030.
- Increase to 315,000 by 2050.
- A large number of these people will need
long-term care. - Traditional sources of long-term care will be
overwhelmed. - Families and workers will be in short supply.
13U.S. Personal Savings Rate1930 - 2001 declines
to record lows.
14Percent of elderly with sufficient income at
normal retirement age to cover long-term care
costs
Figures are for Kansas
15The Bad News
- 265,000 persons 65 will be women living alone
with few family and personal resources. - Two-thirds of these women will not have adequate
income to pay for health and long-term care costs.
16Project 2030 Update
- Implications
- Smaller families will need help to care for older
relatives. - Large numbers of older persons without families
available will need assistance with long-term
care. - Public sector will be overwhelmed.
- Other sectors will increase their role.
17Project 2030 Update
- 2030 Themes
- Maximize peoples ability to meet their own needs
and age in place. - Make all communities age-friendly through
physical design, strong social connections and
integrated services. - Make creative use of aging population and invest
in young people.
18Project 2030 Update
- What can we do as individuals?
- Prepare for our own retirement and old age.
- Meet our obligations as caregivers.
- Support voluntary groups serving elderly (because
public sector will be overwhelmed).
19Project 2030 Update
- What can government do?
- Federal programs are essential foundations for
income and health care for the elderly. - Support informal networks of care and
age-friendly communities. - Maintain safety net for those with inadequate
personal resources.
20Project 2030 Update
- What can employers do?
- Promote flexibility in workplace to accommodate
changing definitions of work and retirement. - Review benefits in light of aging work force.
- Consider eldercare and employee-paid long-term
care insurance.
21Project 2030 Update
- What can voluntary agencies do?
- They will be called upon to be family
substitute for many elderly. - They are key to states leadership in social
structures that work. - Role must increase if public sector reduces
benefits and eligibility.
22Outcomes in 2030
- Individual preparation
- Supportive communities
- Supportive employers
- Partnerships