Sentences with phrase «demographic echo of»

The largest generation of young people since the 1960s are called «echo boomers» because they are the genetic offspring and demographic echo of their parents, the baby boomers.

Not exact matches

The Raging Bull argument highlighted growth drivers such as the energy sector's expansion, US manufacturing competitiveness, the explosive penetration of IT mobility and a housing rebound, combined with some positive demographic shifts for baby boom echo savers and more fiscally responsible behavior out of politicians.»
Uber's workforce should eventually echo its driver demographics, says Orson Aguilar, president of The Greenlining Institute, an Oakland, Calif., based activist group.
This echoed findings from a previous study that analyzed information search patterns on the District's first public school information site and revealed that parents were most interested in demographic characteristics of the student population, followed by location, and, only then, academic performance (Schneider & Buckley, 2002).
This year's awards represent a «a wide range of artistic practices and demographics,» according to the statement, which also quotes Travis Laughlin, the Mitchell Foundation's senior director of programs, as echoing important concepts of the City of San Antonio's new equity lens budget process.
Demographic forces like the retiring baby boomers, emerging echo boomers and increasing ethnic diversity will affect both the demand and supply side of residential real estate.
Two, we'll continue to see strong demand for properties thanks to a confluence of once - in - a-lifetime demographic trends: baby boomers in their peak earning years; their children, the echo boomers — also a huge age cohort — starting to form their own households; retired people living longer and healthier lives; and immigrant households — a record number over the last 30 years — now ready for homeownership.
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