According to Dr Chatterji, also from the Department of Health Statistics and Information Systems at WHO, «Collectively, we need to look beyond the costs commonly associated with aging to think about the benefits that an older, healthier, happier, and more
productive older population can bring to society as a whole.»
Not exact matches
The
population is much
older now, making it more difficult to sustain higher growth, especially without additional immigration or some sort of technological revolution that would make American workers the most
productive they have been since the 1960s.
While it might not seem at first that a new study, being highlighted by BBC News, on the overestimation of how much health care costs for our aging
populations are likely to increase has an immediate connection to environmentalism, in fact realizing that we may have to spend considerably less money here, as people are
productive at much
older ages than they used to, has big implications on how we discuss
population growth and economic expansion.