Abstract

It is generally agreed that the “post-World War II baby boom” began in 1946, and last for about two decades. Baby boomers born in 1946 turned 65 in 2011, which marked the first year of the 20-year “aging boom”. The profile of the aging boomers, so-called “the new generation of older adults (NG),” will surely be very different from that of the current generation of older adults (CG) who are 65 and older. This paper compiles related demographic data in Taiwan [1, 2] and compares the profiles of NG and CG.

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