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Public Policy &
Aging E-Newsletter
Volume 2, Number 3, May 2008
This bimonthly e-newsletter highlights key developments
and viewpoints in the field of aging policy from a wide variety
of sources, including articles and reports circulating in the media,
academy, think tanks, private sector, government and nonprofit organizations.
The goal of this email publication is to reach teachers, students,
and citizens interested in aging-related issues, especially those
who may not have sufficient access to policy information disseminated
both in Washington and around the country.
I. WHATS HAPPENING IN WASHINGTON?
A. Social Security: An Essential Asset and Insurance Protection
for All: For most Americans, the value of their Social Security
is the biggest accumulation of dollars they will take into retirement.
This report
from the National Academy of Social Insurance (NASI) details Social
Security's vital role in safeguarding Americans families and retirees,
with a particular focus on groups at high risk of having inadequate
incomes - older women, African American families, and the Latino
community.
B. 2008 OASDI Trustees Report: The Social Security Administration
presents the current and projected future financial status of Social
Security trust funds in this report.
Responses to this report can be viewed from NASI,
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
(CBPP), and the Center for Retirement Research
(CRR).
C. Health and Aging Policy Fellows Program: An important new professional
fellowship opportunity from Columbia University has become available
to those with a demonstrated commitment to health and aging issues
and a desire to be involved in health policy. Supported by The Atlantic
Philanthropies, this national program's goal is to create a cadre
of professional leaders who will serve as positive change agents
in health and aging policy. The application deadline for 2008-2009
has been extended to May 27, 2008. For further information, click
here.
II. WHATS HAPPENING AROUND THE COUNTRY?
A. Older Americans Month-May 2008: Click here
to view this collection of statistics from the Census Bureau to
commemorate Older Americans Month.
B. Older Americans 2008-Key indicators of Well-Being: A unique,
comprehensive look at aging in the United States from the Federal
Interagency Forum on Aging-Related Statistics, this report provides
the latest data on the 38 key indicators selected by the Forum to
portray aspects of the lives of older Americans and their families.
Click here
to view.
C. Retooling for an Aging America-Building the Health Care Workforce:
The Institute of Medicine (IOM) has released a new report to determine
the health care needs of Americans over 65 years of age and to assess
those needs through an analysis of the forces that shape the health
care workforce, including education and training, models of care,
and public and private programs. Click here
to view the report brief and fact sheet.
III. THIS ISSUE'S MAJOR POLICY STORY: WOMEN AND RETIREMENT SECURITY
On November 30, 1689, Madame de Sévigné wrote to
her daughter Madame de Grignan:
It appears to me that in spite of myself I have been dragged
to this inevitable point where old age must be undergone. I see
it there before me; I have reached it; and I should at least like
so to arrange matters that I do not move on, that I do not travel
further along this path
.
These lines, written more than three centuries ago, came to mind
as I read the items in this issue's major policy story on "women
and retirement security." Modern-day policy makers and policy
analysts have documented that a gender gap pervades the economics
of aging. Despite remarkable shifts in job opportunities since the
1960s, differences in the employment histories of men and women
affect salaries as well as access to pensions and health-care benefits.
The triple jeopardy of age, gender, and race/ethnicity/class remains
salient. The articles in this section underscore the vulnerability
of women who face the "inevitable point where old age must
be undergone."
- Andy Achenbaum
A. From Work to Retirement-Tracking Changes in Women's Poverty
Status: Although poverty among older adults is lower than that of
other age groups, poverty is twice as high among older women as
among older men, and three times as high among older African American
women as among older white women. This brief synopsis of a study
for AARP's Public Policy Institute demonstrates how poverty status
among women changes over the life course and is influenced by race,
marital status, health status, work experience, and poverty in earlier
life. Click here
to view.
B. How Older Women Can Shield Themselves from Poverty: This brief
from the Population Reference Bureau summarizes a presentation by
Professor Timothy Smeeding from Syracuse University's Center for
Policy Research on the steadily growing population of elderly women
living in poverty. This group is expected to grow in size as the
baby boomers age and as more women divorce or separate. Click here
to view the summary (also available in webcast and podcast formats).
C. The MetLife Family Matters Study-Examining the Effect of Varying
Family Structures on Retirement Planning: This study
from the MetLife Foundation determines the degree to which the particular
family structure of those age 40 to 65 shapes how they think about
and plan for retirement.
D. Older Women's Income and Wealth Packages in Cross-National Perspective:
From the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, this
report
assesses the economic well-being of elderly women in cross-national
perspective, comparing the United States to four other rich countries.
E. Who is Ready for Retirement, How Ready, and How Can We Know?:
This report
from AARP Public Policy Institute examines various studies on retirees'
income adequacy, especially Baby Boomers. While some will not have
sufficient funds, others will be inadequately prepared and yet others
will be unwilling to leave the work force. The report concludes
that it is neither too late for the government nor the private sector
to educate "boomers" about their realistic options for
the future.
IV. WORTH NOTING
A. Stimulus Payment Tool: The AARP Foundation and the National
Council on Aging (NCOA) have launched a user-friendly online tool
to simplify the economic stimulus payment application process for
millions of Americans who are not otherwise required to file income
tax returns. The online tool can be found by clicking here.
B. Top Ten in Ten: The MetLife Mature Market Institute recently
celebrated 10 years of bringing groundbreaking research on aging,
caregiving, long-term care, and retirement to the industry and to
consumers at large by releasing this report
summarizing the top 10 studies conducted by the Mature Market Institute
over the past 10 years.
C. Serving the Aging Citizen: Click here
to view Deloitte Public Sector industry group's "Aging Snapshots"
series-a collection of briefs that examine issues and challenges
related to the aging population.
V. WHAT'S HAPPENING ABROAD?
A. The Graying of the Great Powers-Demography and Geopolitics in
the 21st Century: While some political scientists and security experts
argue that the forces of demography are pushing the world toward
greater peace and stability, this report
by CSIS Global Aging Initiative concludes that they pose growing
security threats-and that the period of greatest danger lies just
over the horizon in the 2020s. The report explores how population
aging and population decline will constrain the ability of the United
States and other developed countries to maintain national and global
security over the next few decades.
B. Managing Migration-The Global Challenge: The number of international
migrants is at an all-time high. This new bulletin
from the Population Reference Bureau (PRB) reviews the migration
streams of the last several decades, globally and by world region.
C. Global Aging and the Demographic Divide: In the latter half
of the last century, the world's developed nations completed a long
process of demographic transition: a shift from a period of high
mortality, short lives, and large families to one with a longer
life expectancy and far fewer children. In developing countries
this demographic transition is certainly underway, though these
countries vary widely at their places along the spectrum. This article
was originally printed in the Public Policy & Aging Report 17,
No. 4 (2007).
VI. PERSPECTIVES ON POLICY: ROB HUDSON, EDITOR, PP&AR
The demographic patterns of older Americans and certain ethnic
groups will have greater effects on the country's socioeconomic
outlook than previously thought, according to the latest issue of
Public Policy & Aging Report titled "America's Regional
Demographics in the Early 21st Century: The Role of Seniors, Boomers,
and New Minorites." In particular, the Baby Boomer generation
and residents of Hispanic and Asian backgrounds will have a noticeable
impact as their populations swell. The entire issue is authored
by cutting-edge demographer William H. Frey. His research upends
traditional notions of how and where Americans spend their later
years. In states where senior populations will grow fastest over
the next 35 years, "aging in place" rather than migration
will drive this growth. In Georgia, for example, the number of residents
age 65+ will increase by more than 40 percent from 2010 to 2020
due to the aging of existing residents, versus less than three percent
due to migration. Frey's examination of minorities finds Hispanics
and Asian immigrants having a profound effect on the entire country,
especially in certain regions. Until recently, these populations
were highly clustered in a few big metropolitan areas. But statistics
show that there has been a dispersal of immigrants away from the
traditional magnets of Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, and Miami
to new destinations in all parts of the country.
To purchase this issue of PP&AR, or to subscribe, please click
here.
The Public
Policy & Aging E-Newsletter is a free bimonthly email publication.
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Newsletter Editors: Ellyn Emsley and Greg O'Neill, National Academy
on an Aging Society; Andy Achenbaum, University of Houston.
The Public Policy and Aging E-Newsletter is supported in part
by a grant from the AARP Office of Academic Affairs.
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