000 01950 a2200313 4500
008 051207s xx 000 0 eng
022 _a1522-3213;
050 _aAC1.S5
082 _a050
100 _aGallagher, John,
245 0 _aBoomer Bust: They're Changing How America Retires.
_cJohn Gallagher.
260 _bDetroit Free Press,
_c2005.
440 _aSIRS Enduring Issues 2006.
_nArticle 45,
_pFamily,
_x1522-3213;
500 _aArticles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006.
500 _aOriginally Published: Boomer Bust: They're Changing How America Retires, Jan. 14, 2005; pp. n.p..
520 _a"Is the coming retirement of the baby boom generation a demographic time bomb for the nation's workplace? Many futurists think so. They warn that employers are unprepared to lose the boomers, those 76 million Americans born between 1946 and 1964 who have changed society, for better or worse, at every step of their lives....But to others, the much-discussed and often-feared boomer retirement is the Y2K computer bug all over again--a catastrophe that never happens, a much-feared event that America passes by with not so much as a speed bump." (DETROIT FREE PRESS) The author discusses the impending retirement of the baby boom generation, noting that "nobody knows for sure what boomer retirement will mean for employers and employees. The graying of the boomers could go smoothly or disastrously or anything in between."
599 _aRecords created from non-MARC resource.
650 _aBaby boom generation (1946-1964)
650 _aGeneration X (1965-1978)
650 _aGeneration Y (1979-1994)
650 _aLabor supply
650 _aMedical care
_xCost of
650 _aMedicare
650 _aOlder people
_xMedical care
650 _aRetirement age
650 _aRetirement income
710 _aProQuest Information and Learning Company
_tSIRS Enduring Issues 2006,
_pFamily.
_x1522-3213;
942 _c UKN
999 _c37169
_d37169