The first of the post-war baby boomers turned 55 in the past few years.
ECONOMIST: Are 5.1m Americans missing from the unemployment figures?
Steve Jobs was born in 1955 to a Syrian immigrant father at the height of the post-War Baby Boom.
Even with the demographic bulge caused by the post-war baby boom, America can afford its senior citizens, the people too old to work.
Japan has a huge population of post-war baby-boomers and relatively few young people indeed, so few children are being born that the population has started to shrink.
ECONOMIST: Japanese newspapers are in worse shape than they appear
At the same time post-war baby boomers are on the eve of retirement: the number of people aged 65 or over is expected to rise by 40m.
Already, as the post-war baby-boomers reach their 50s, Japan's lifetime-employers are carrying the cost of paying their senior workers over the odds in return for all the wages they forwent two or three decades ago.
ECONOMIST: Social conventions and demography add to the sclerosis
And, as is becoming clear, the war against baby girls is not confined to China.
The post-war "baby-boom" generation is now reaching reproductive age.
The only comparable event is the post-World War II Baby Boom in the US. This is an opportunity, and can be a huge challenge, because all those people will want to be well-fed, educated and productively employed.
With 2007 as the largest birth year in U.S. history, even larger than the years of the post-World-War-II baby boom.
Boom time: A sharp increase in births after World War II created the baby boomer generation, born into an era of unprecedented peace and prosperity.
Those horrible, war-mongering, Bambi killing, unborn baby defending, God-believing conservatives, who think that there are things worth going to war to protect, must be defeated at all costs.
She was born in Afghanistan and her parents, when she is a baby, need to leave because of the war.
FORBES: "I'm Not Ready To Stop:" Jill Iscol On Privilege, Idealism And Activism
But -- but before that, there was us -- the baby boomers, the children of the World War II generation.
Elizabeth A. Davis is passionately, winningly earnest as Grusha, a servant who plucks a baby of noble birth from the chaos of war, then goes before a tribunal in the hope of keeping the child as her own.
The baby boomers, that vast cohort of post World War II babies, have now started to retire.
For all its high-tech local networks, the firm faces a fierce battle against the entrenched Baby Bells, which are preparing for a price war.
Think about all those horrors that emerged in the late 60s and early 70s -- "The Exorcist, " "Don't Look Now, " "Rosemary's Baby" -- just as the Vietnam War was raging.
When I think about America, I think about my family, and I think about my grandfather who fought in World War II, and my grandmother, who, even with a baby, was working on a bomber assembly line.
You know, when I was talking to the Gold Star families there, there were some widows dating back to World War II, and then there was a young woman who had just had a baby and had just lost her husband.
Baby boomers started working around 1963, dating to the time the first post-war babies would have turned 18.
应用推荐