Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: 192.168.6.56/handle/123456789/53160
Title: Challenges of Aging
Authors: Cornelius Torp Jürgen Bauknecht Gordon L. Clark
Keywords: Population aging
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Description: This books aims to explore the challenges and the consequences of demographic aging. Population aging is not a new phenomenon. All highly developed countries, and particularly those in Europe, experienced a process of demographic aging throughout the entire twentieth century, a process that is ongoing. While in 1900 only 5 percent of the British population was 65 and over, this increased to 10.8 percent by 1950 and 15.8 percent by 2000; the share of the older population is expected to rise as high as 24.7 percent by 2050 (Phillipson, 2013, p. 12; United Nations, 2012). In Japan, where the demographic aging process over recent decades has been faster than anywhere else, people aged 65 and over now make up a quarter of the population; estimates made by the United Nations Population Division for 2050 add up to 36.5 percent. Even in the United States, whose population by Western standards is relatively young, the proportion of old people is expected to climb from 12.4 percent in 2000 to 21.4 percent in 2050 (United Nations, 2012). Other measures of population aging confirm the picture. The European median age, which divides the population into a younger and an older part of equal size, has risen from 28.9 in 1950 to 40.3 in 2010 (United Nations, 2012). At the same time, an increasing proportion of the elderly now survive into their eighties and nineties, and even become centenarians. In fact, the “oldest old,” aged 80 and over, today represent the fastest growing age group in the world (Harper, 2006, p. 9). In 2050, the world’s largest centenarian population is predicted to be found in Japan, with more than one million people aged 100 and over (Timonen, 2008, p. 24).
URI: http://10.6.20.12:80/handle/123456789/53160
ISBN: 978-1-137-28317-7
Appears in Collections:Population Studies

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
220.pdf2.04 MBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.