U.S. Census Bureau
U.S. Department of Commerce News
EMBARGOED UNTIL: 12:01 A.M. EST, DECEMBER 13, 2001 (THURSDAY)
                                
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Public Information Office                        Vicky Cahan
U.S. Census Bureau                               Public Information Office
301-457-3030/301-457-3670                        National Institute on Aging
301-457-1037 (TDD)                               301-496-1752
e-mail: pio@census.gov                           e-mail: cahanv@nia.nih.gov

Victoria Velkoff/Kevin Kinsella
301-457-1371

                   World's Older Population Growing 
                   by Unprecedented 800,000 a Month

Radio Soundbites

  The world's population age 65 and older is growing by an unprecedented
800,000 people a month, according to a report issued today by the U.S.
Census Bureau and the National Institute on Aging (NIA).

  The report, An Aging World: 2001 [pdf], predicted that this phenomenon 
of global aging will continue well into the 21st century, with the 
numbers and proportions of older people continuing to rise in both 
developed and developing worlds.

  The pace of population aging, the report found, varies widely among
countries. Generally, developing countries are aging faster than more
developed ones. Demographers estimated that more than three-quarters of
the world's net gain of older people from 1999 to 2000 occurred in
still-developing countries.

  The ratio of older people to total population differs widely among
countries, too. The United States was 32nd on a list ranking countries
with high proportions of people age 65 and older.

  Italy replaced Sweden as the world's oldest country in 2000, with 
18 percent of Italians having celebrated at least a 65th birthday, the 
report said.  (see charts)

  "Global aging is occurring at a rate never seen before and we will need
to pay close attention to how countries respond to the challenges and
opportunities of growing older," said Nancy Gordon, the Census Bureau's
associate director for demographic programs. "In the United States, one of
the comparatively younger developed countries, with 13 percent of its
people age 65 and older, we may be able to learn from the experience of
'older' countries."

  "Population aging is a fundamental transformation of human society,"
said Richard M. Suzman, associate director of the NIA Behavioral and
Social Research Program. "Many governments and international agencies, as
well as demographic researchers, have only recently begun to pay attention
to this increasingly important trend."

  Generally, populations begin to age when fertility declines and adult
mortality improves. Of the countries covered in this report, Japan had the
highest average life expectancy at birth 81 years, followed by Singapore
(80) and several other developed countries: Australia, Canada, Italy,
Iceland, Sweden and Switzerland (79). Levels for the United States and
most other developed countries fall in the 76- to 78-year range.
                                
  An Aging World: 2001 is part of ongoing efforts by the Census Bureau and
the NIA to study aging in the United States and the world. Prepared by
Victoria Velkoff and Kevin Kinsella of the Census Bureau, it looks at
current and projected population in countries throughout the world and
includes comparative data on life expectancy, health status, social
support and retirement.

  Other report highlights:

    - Of the 227 countries or areas of the world with at least 5,000 population, 
      167 (74 percent) had some form of an old-age disability or survivors' 
      program in the late 1990s, compared with 33 in 1940.

    - In the mid 1990s, public pensions absorbed 15 percent of the gross
      domestic product in Italy and Uruguay; 7.2 percent in the United 
      States and 0.4 percent in Mexico.
  
    - Disability rates among the older population were declining in developed 
      countries but were likely to increase in developing countries.
  
    - Older people in the United States were more educated than in most
      other countries, but educational attainment of the older population 
      was projected to increase in most countries over the next several 
      decades.
  
    - In many countries, the oldest old (80 and above) were the fastest-growing 
      component of the population.
  
    - More than one-third of the world's oldest people (80 and above) 
      lived in three countries: China (11.5 million), the United States 
      (9.2 million) and India (6.2 million).

    - Among developing regions, the Caribbean had the highest percentage 
      of older people (7.2 percent).

    - There were more older women than older men in the vast majority of
      the world's countries; notable exceptions were India, Iran and Bangladesh.
  
  Suzman noted that the Census Bureau/NIA report comes amid new
recommendations for international research on world aging by a panel of
the National Academy of Sciences. The NIA-supported review, reported in
Preparing for An Aging World: The Case for Cross-National Research, found
that an international focus would be a powerful tool for policy-makers
worldwide, offering a broader approach to understanding population aging
than single-nation research alone. The Academy's report urged countries to
develop comparable data on their own aging populations.

                                       -X-


Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
(301) 763-3030

Last Revised: December 13, 2001 at 08:21:39 AM

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