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Population, Resources and Development

Riding the Age Waves - Volume 1

  • Book
  • © 2005

Overview

  • This is one of a small number of pioneering studies that identify population-development or policy links more exactly than in the past
  • It takes age-transition analysis far beyond the well-trodden area of population aging
  • It studies implications of demographic change for a wide range of policy areas, especially those relating to human capital

Part of the book series: International Studies in Population (ISIP, volume 1)

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Table of contents (12 chapters)

  1. Introduction

Keywords

About this book

In the 21st century, the populations of the world’s nations will display large and long-lived changes in age structure. Many of these began with fertility change and are amplified by declining mortality and by migration within and between nations. Demography will matter in this century not by force of numbers, but by the pressures of waves of age structural change.

Many developing countries are in relatively early stages of fertility decline and will experience age waves for two or more generations. These waves create shifting flows of people into the key age groups, greatly complicating the task of managing development, from building human capabilities and creating jobs to growing industry, infrastructure and institutions. In this book, distinguished scientists examine key demographic, social, economic, and policy aspects of age structural change in developing economies.

This book provides a joint examination of dimensions of age structural change that have often been considered in isolation from each other (for example, education, job creation, land use, health); it uses case studies to examine policy consequences and options and develops qualitative and formal methods to analyze the dynamics and consequences of age structural change.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Stanford University, USA

    Shripad Tuljapurkar

  • Waikato University, Hamilton, New Zealand

    Ian Pool

  • Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand

    Vipan Prachuabmoh

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