02634oam 2200553 450 991080825840332120190911112725.01-940308-89-5(OCoLC)903964534(MiFhGG)GVRL8XGT(EXLCZ)99371000000034197920150602h20152015 uy 0engurun|---uuuuatxtccrThe baby boom Americans born 1946 to 1964 /by the New Strategist editors8th ed.Amityville New Strategist Press, LLC2015Amityville, New York :New Strategist Press, LLC,[2015]�20151 online resource (xvii, 419 pages) illustrationsAmerican Generations SeriesDescription based upon print version of record.1-940308-87-9 1-322-87134-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.chapter 1. Attitudes -- chapter 2. Education -- chapter 3. Health -- chapter 4. Housing -- chapter 5. Income -- chapter 6. Labor force -- chapter 7. Living arrangements -- chapter 8. Population -- chapter 9. Spending -- chapter 10. Time use -- chapter 11. Wealth.After more than six decades of breaking the rules established by their elders, the Baby-Boom generation and older Americans are one and the same. In 2014, Boomers spanned the ages from 50 to 68, accounting for 24 percent of the total U.S. population and 71 percent of the population aged 50 or older. The eighth edition of The Baby Boom: Americans Born 1946 to 1964 includes in its pages, for the first time, a statistical profile of the U.S. population aged 50 or older-absorbing the New Strategist reference book Older Americans: A Changed Market into one volume. Boomers already dominate the olderAmerican generations series.Baby boom generationUnited StatesStatisticsBaby boom generationUnited StatesEconomic conditionsStatisticsConsumersUnited StatesStatisticsConsumer behaviorUnited StatesStatisticsBaby boom generationBaby boom generationEconomic conditionsConsumersConsumer behavior305.2Editors The New Strategist1633303New Strategist EditorsNew Strategist EditorsMiFhGGMiFhGGBOOK9910808258403321The baby boom4039967UNINA