Population Trends in the 1980's

Population Trends in the 1980's

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1992

Total Pages: 80

ISBN-13:

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Presents in four chapters the patterns of population growth and migration, derived from estimates made year by year in the last decade. The report discusses trends not only in the Nation, but in States, in metropolitan areas, and (through 1984).


Demographic Trends and Economic Reality

Demographic Trends and Economic Reality

Author: George Sternlieb

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 1982

Total Pages: 180

ISBN-13:

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Population, jobs, and buying-power changes are the locomotives of development. The long-term trends that undergird them are just beginning to be revealed in demographic data. These trends are outlined here in an easily understood, essential book.You need to know the numbers but also the down-to-earth meaning of the changes in age structure and household composition changes. The revolution in labor force and the economic environment impact every developer and planner. In this volume the data are assembled and uniquely linked to income levels, consumption patterns, housing, and urban and regional development, both in the present - and the future.This book highlights the dollars and sense implications of the big trend lines. It utilizes both Census - and post-Census - material for the most up-to-date compendium of Need to Know in the market.


Improving Data on America's Aging Population

Improving Data on America's Aging Population

Author: National Research Council

Publisher: National Academies Press

Published: 1996-12-20

Total Pages: 64

ISBN-13: 0309056330

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The Committee on National Statistics and the Committee on Population, at the request of the NIA, convened a workshop in March 1996 to discuss data on the aging population that address the emerging and important social, economic, and health conditions of the older population. The purposes of the workshop were to identify how the population at older ages in the next few decades will differ from the older population today, to understand the underlying causes of those changes, to anticipate future problems and policy issues, and to suggest future needs for data for research in these areas. The scope of the workshop was broader than that of the 1988 CNSTAT report, including not only data on health and long-term care, but also actuarial, economic, demographic, housing, and epidemiological data needs for informing public policy.