Project: IDEA: Informing Decisionmakers to Act
252 Search Results Found For : "%EC%9D%8C%EC%84%B1365%EC%B6%9C%EC%9E%A5%EC%83%B5%20%EC%95%88%EC%A0%84%EA%B8%88%EF%BC%BBkatalk:ZA31%EF%BC%BD%EC%95%88%EC%A0%84%EA%B8%88%2050"
Global Aging: The Challenge of Success
(2005) Populations are growing older in countries throughout the world. While the populations of more developed countries have been aging for well over a century, this process began recently in most less developed countries, and it is being compressed into a few decades. By 2050, nearly 1.2 billion of the expected 1.5 billion people age 65 or older will reside in today's less developed regions.
Le vieillissement de la population présente des défis pour tous les pays
Selon le Population Bulletin de mars 2005 publié par le PRB, la population mondiale vieillit, ce qui présente de nombreux défis tant pour les pays riches que les pays pauvres.
Aging Baby Boomers to Face Caregiving, Obesity, Inequality Challenges
The aging of the baby boom generation could fuel a 75 percent increase in the number of Americans ages 65 and older requiring nursing home care, to about 2.3 million in 2030 from 1.3 million in 2010, the Population Reference Bureau (PRB) projects in a new report.
Rapid Population Growth, Crowded Cities Present Challenges in the Philippines
(2003) Fast-paced population growth and rampant urbanization represent some of the major population concerns in the Philippines, a country of 80 million people where the average number of children born to a woman is close to four and where a sizeable 37 percent of the population is under age 15.
Ukraine’s Demographic Reality
(2014) Ukraine, a former republic of the Soviet Union, has undergone a series of dramatic demographic changes since its independence in 1991. Most significant, its birth rate declined sharply following independence, mirroring similar developments in other former Soviet republics.
Which Country Has the Oldest Population? It Depends on How You Define ‘Old.’
(2019) Japan, Italy, and Germany top the list of the world’s oldest countries—if the data are based on the share of the population ages 65 and older.
2011 World Population Data Sheet
(2011) Global population will reach 7 billion later in 2011, just 12 years after reaching 6 billion in 1999.