By the end of the decade, the U.S. will be markedly older. One in five Americans will be at least 65 by 2030, and by 2034, older adults will outnumber children for the first time, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
This demographic reality is already transforming the economy — from the size of the labor force to federal spending on Social Security and Medicare.
A recent report from The New York Times details how retirement, in particular, has become one of the economy’s largest and fastest-growing forces.
Yet the experience of aging remains sharply unequal, shaped by gaps in details ⇒
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