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Megatrend
#1: Changing Demographics
American society has
undergone seismic shifts in the past few decades, dramatically
changing the nature of our families, our workplaces and a myriad
other aspects of our lives. These fundamental changes have come in
five major areas: our ages, our families, our economic status, our
ethnic makeup and our educational achievement.
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The 20th Century’s
Tectonic Shifts in the Demographic Landscape |
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Demographic
Measure |
Change |
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Age |
The Baby Boom
is probably the most significant demographic phenomenon
of the 20th century, shaping all aspects of
our economic lives. The aging of the 76 million Baby
Boomers has major implications not only for them, but
for the following generations of workers who must
support them as they retire. |
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Family Status |
The
"disintegration" of the nuclear family began
in 1970 and has only begun to stabilize. The rise in
single parent families has, unfortunately, been a major
factor in rising child poverty rates; over 20% of young
children are poor. |
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Educational
Achievement |
Educational
achievement has trailed the demand for knowledge-based
skills. But now adults are heading back to school in
record numbers. |
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Ethnic Makeup |
Our nation is
becoming more diverse – by 2050,
"minorities" will represent 40% of the
population. |
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Economic
Status |
These factors,
coupled with the shift to a knowledge-based economy,
have widened the gap between the haves and the
have-nots. |
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Source:
Merrill Lynch |
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Aging America
The Baby Boom is probably
the most significant demographic phenomenon of the 20th Century,
shaping all aspects of our economic lives. This generation of 76
million people born between 1946 and 1964 in many ways built the
dynamic economy we have today, although increasingly that torch is
being passed to the much smaller Generation X.
The aging of the Baby
Boomers will become 3 significant economic issues, not only for them
but also for following generations.
Competition for jobs at the top of
the hierarchy from older baby boomers and, for the rest, competing
with up and coming Generation Xers. In just four years for the first
time ever there will be more workers over 40 than there are workers
under 40. As Fortune Magazine notes, "At some point
after 2010, as baby-boomers start to retire, companies will get
desperate for workers--even older workers. But until then, there
will be too many highly paid boomers competing for too few top
jobs."
Competing with young and
hungry Generation Xers isn't much easier--The harder Gen Xers work,
the more they tend to resent all those 44-year-olds who put in half
as many hours and earn more money.… 'You have to do more for young
people because they are likely to turn over more quickly than older
workers. Consequently, a lot of companies are putting young people
on the fast track, so you have 28-year-olds running entire
departments that 20 years ago were run by 55-year-olds,' explains
Joe Gibbons, an H.R. consultant at William M. Mercer. 'That's a big
change--it's a sea change.' (Fortune Magazine, Feb. 1, 1999)
Extending the working life of Baby
Boomers: Boomers
will begin to retire in about ten years, and with the advances of
science, will live longer than any generation before them.
Concerns about our Social
Security system are already high on our national agenda--will there
be enough money to pay for a secure retirement for these people?
Should we push back the retirement age? Will older Americans have
the skills and flexibility to work in the new economy, and will
they? These questions are key drivers for the growth in the
corporate training market.
Making Generations X and Y
Hyper-Procedure: Generation
X may find itself stuck between a demographic rock and hard
place--in their peak earning years they have to not only provide for
themselves and their children, but also for the retired Boomers. The
fundamental drivers of economic growth are growth in the labor force
and productivity gains. Given that the labor force is not going to
grow in the near term, we need to ensure than both Generations X and
Y are as productive as possible.
Family Status
Over the last 30 years,
the nature of the American family has dramatically changed. Today
only 7% of families resemble the stereotypical Ozzie-and-Harriet
model of a never-divorced working father and stay-at-home mother. In
1960, only 19% of married mothers with children under age six worked
outside the home.
Combined, an almost unbelievable
80% of U.S. families are either dual-income or single-parent
households. This has
significant implications for children in these families.
Increasingly, a portion of the early education that used to take
place at home with the child's mother is being outsourced to a
relative or childcare provider. Thus, the need for educationally
enriched, high-quality and affordable childcare has never been
greater.
Economic Status
The new phenomenon of dual
income families, coupled with great economic times, has masked a
widening gap between the "haves" and "have nots."
And the gap is now significant for some of our citizens. Over 20% of
our children, for example, live in poverty, far more than in any
other developed nation.
In our knowledge-based
economy, intellectual capital is one of the few determinants
differentiating employees. As such, the correlation between
education and compensation has become crystal clear. The gap
between those with college degrees and those without has grown
dramatically, from 50% in 1980, to over 100% today. Put another way,
the purchasing power of a 30-year-old man with a high-school diploma
has dropped by over one third over the past two decades.
What has helped compensate
for the dramatic reduction of the purchasing power of the
high-school educated breadwinner has been strong economic
conditions and the increase in the workforce participation of women,
up 39% since 1970 to 57% of all women.
Ethnic Diversity
American history has
always been characterized by diversity, and the strength of new
ideas from each wave of immigrants has enriched our economy and our
culture. This process will continue into the next century, which,
when combined with higher birth rates among certain groups results
in a much more diverse population. By 2050, only 60% of the
population will be white, down from 77% in 1990.
The bulk of the growth in
the "minority" population will be the result of a growing
Hispanic presence. California is often a bellwether for the future
of the U.S., and in terms of racial diversity, this is certainly the
case. One fourth of California students are limited-English
proficient, and in grades K-3, that percentage is one in three. In
many Los Angeles schools, Spanish is the predominant language. In
still others, as many as sixteen languages may be spoken ahead of
English. A push for language training, technology-based education in
different languages, and training in cultural understanding will be
important in this environment.
Educational Attainment
Ironically, at a time when
education and training are among the few determinants of economic
success, only 21% of American adults over age 25 have a bachelor's
or higher degree.
These economic facts are
driving "non-traditional" students back to school in
record levels. Adults age 25 and over represent 43% (6.1 million
students) of all post-secondary enrollments, up from 28% in
1970.
Another shift in our
educational goals as a population--teens graduating from school are
going to college at rates higher than ever before, creating great
opportunity for post-secondary educators.
The impact of demographic
shifts on the education and training industry are mammoth and
long-lasting, as described in the following table.
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The
Impact of Demographic Shifts on Education & Training |
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Sector |
Impact |
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Early Education |
The childcare sector
is growing and professionalizing as more mothers head to the
workforce. Access for children in poverty is still a problem. |
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K-12 Education |
Generation Y is
working its way through our K-12 institutions. They are more
diverse than ever before, and have the pressures of preparing
for a new economy in old world schools. |
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Postsecondary |
Demographics changes
create powerful opportunity here. Generation Y is just
starting into its college years, more high-school students are
heading to school than ever before, and, faced with cold
economic facts, many Gen Xers (and even Baby Boomers) are
going to school in record numbers. |
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Corporate Training |
Continual training
and retraining will be essential to prolonging the workplace
longevity of the Baby Boomers, and to ensure that Generations
X and Y are as productive as possible to support the lengthy
retirement of the Boomers as well as provide for their own
retirements. (Ask any Generation Xer--they aren't banking on
Social Security in retirement.) |
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Consumer |
Parents and,
increasingly, grandparents, with money to spend will make
educating children a high priority. Their desire to provide
them with every edge in the new economy will benefit
consumer-oriented education products. |
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Source: Merrill
Lynch
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