U.S. Census Bureau
U.S. Department of Commerce News

                     FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                    TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1998
                                
Public Information Office                              CB98-63
301-457-3030/301-457-2603 (fax)
301-457-4067 (TDD)
e-mail: pio@census.gov

Yvonne Gist/Victoria Velkoff
301-457-1371

  The Number of Older Women Will More Than Double Worldwide in
      Next Quarter Century, U. S. Census Bureau Forecasts


  The number of women worldwide aged 60 and over is expected to more than
double between now and 2025 to 645 million. This means that worldwide the
number of older women will be nearly twice the projected total population
of the United States, according to a brief released recently by the
Commerce Department's Census Bureau. 

  The brief, Gender and Aging: Demographic Dimensions, IB/97-3,
which can be accessed at http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/publist.html,
marks the first time the Census Bureau has focused on the world's older
women.

  "We expect that nearly three-quarters of these women will be living in
what is known today as the developing world," said Census Bureau analyst
Victoria Velkoff, co-author of the brief with Yvonne Gist. "In developing
countries the challenges faced by older women who generally outnumber
older men may become increasingly important as their numbers grow." 

  Because of faster declines in fertility, developing countries are aging
at a much more rapid pace than most developed nations, the authors said.
In at least 75 developing countries, the projected increase in the number
of older women between 1997 and 2025 exceeds 150 percent, while in many
developed countries the increase is less than 50 percent. 

  Other highlights from the brief include:

   -	In most developed countries, older women, who currently account for
	more than 1 in 10 persons, are expected to constitute more than 1
	in 7 by 2025. In Italy and Japan, it is projected that 1 of 6
	people will be a woman 60 and over.
  
   -	In almost all countries, life expectancy is higher for women than for
	men. The average gap between the sexes in developing countries is
	about three years; in developed countries, it is seven. However,
	in some developed countries (such as Russia, Estonia and
     	Belarus), women outlive men by more than 10 years.
  
   -	In most countries, older women are much more likely to be widowed
	than older men. For example, 58 percent of Indonesia's women, but
	only 11 percent of its men, age 60 and over are widowed.
  
   -	Literacy rates for older women run the gamut, from less than 5
	percent in Algeria, Ethiopia, Morocco, Nepal and Sudan to more
	than 90 percent in Argentina, Italy and the United States.
  
   -	Worldwide, women make up a little more than half of the 60-69 age
	group, but about two-thirds of those aged 80 or older; these
	proportions are somewhat higher in developed than in developing
	countries.

  The brief, produced with financial support from the Office of the
Demography of Aging at the U.S. National Institute on Aging, uses
statistics from the International Database in the Census Bureau's
International Programs Center. Three additional briefs on older women
worldwide also are planned, covering women's health, care-giving and their
economic situation. 

  Copies of this brief may be obtained from the Public Information Office
on 301-457-3030. 
-X-
                                
The Census Bureau pre-eminent collector and provider of timely, relevant
and quality data about the people and economy of the United States. In
more than 100 surveys annually and 20 censuses a decade, evolving from the
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Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
301-763-3030

Last Revised: April 12, 2001 at 09:04:53 AM

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