"It is gratifying to see two such prestigious observers of aging issues put forward a clear analysis of the aging 'crisis' in the United States. This book is an antidote to the ceaseless drumbeat of doom and selfishness coming from those who would dismantle our key sources of retirement security in the United States. Schulz and Binstock are recognized experts in the field of aging whose counsel should put to rest the claims that we cannot and should not rely on shared public programs for our future. They offer real solutions, not just sloganeering on an issue that should concern all Americans." -- Marilyn Moon, Vice President and Director of the Health Program, American Institutes for Research, Former Trustee of the Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds "This seminal policy assessment, by the country's two leading policy gerontologists, is a must read for the general public, politicians, pundits, and anyone who cares about growing old in the United States. Schulz and Binstock provide the expert analysis, balanced viewpoints, and historical overview essential for countering alarmist scenarios and promoting reasonable public policy and discourse about the future of our aging nation." -- Fernando M. Torres-Gil, Professor and Director of the Center for Policy Research on Aging, School of Public Policy, University of California, Los Angeles, Former U.S. Assistant Secretary for Aging "Aging Nation is a solid corrective thwack against conventional (and often false) wisdom, propagated by the doomsters, about the perils of a nation living longer. Take notes for your own protection." -- Dr. Robert Butler, Founding Director of the National Institute on Aging, President and CEO of the International Longevity Center-USA
James H. Schulz is Emeritus Professor of Economics,
Brandeis University. A former president of the Gerontological
Society of America, and recipient of numerous awards—including the
Kleemier Award for outstanding research in the field of aging—he
has written extensively on aging, pensions, retirement, and social
policy. His 17 books include Social Security in the Twenty-First
Century, The Economics of Population Aging, Providing Adequate
Retirement Income When Life-Time Employment Ends, and seven
editions of The Economics of Aging.
Robert H. Binstock is Professor of Aging, Health, and
Society at Case Western Reserve University. A former president of
the Gerontological Society of America, and recipient of numerous
awards, he has served as director of a White House Task Force on
Older Americans and as chairman and member of many advisory panels
to the U.S., state, and local governments. He is the author of more
than 250 articles and book chapters, primarily on the politics and
policies affecting aging, and has published 24 books, including
America's Political System, Too Old for Health Care?, The Future of
Long-Term Care, and six editions of the Handbook of Aging and the
Social Sciences.
At the core of Aging Nation is a description and assessment of the
strengths and weaknesses of major programs affecting the elderly
(past and current) and rising generations. . . . Chapters 3 through
9 offer the clearest, most judicious assessment of the U.S.
political economy in an aging society that I have read. For the
quality of these analytic chapters alone, Aging Nation merits wide
classroom adoption in gerontology, policy, and social science
classes at the undergraduate and graduate levels.
*Journal of Aging and Social Policy*
[E]xtremely valuable and timely contributions to the struggle
against the conservative attack on the nation's relatively modest
efforts to ensure a minimum level of collective well-being. These
books are analytically rigorous and lucid counterattacks against
what Hacker calls the crusaders for personal responsibility and
Schulz and Binstock call the merchants of doom.' (Reviewed in
conjunction with The Great Risk Shift, Jacob S. Hacker, Oxford
University Press.)
*The Gerontologist*
Writing for the general public, Schulz and Binstock describe
changes occurring in the US due to the aging of baby boomers and
how their retirement decisions will be affected. They also discuss
situations they will need to consider and address areas usually
covered in separate books: Social Security history, policy issues,
reform proposals, health care issues, work and retirement policy,
private pensions, and the politics of aging. In particular, they
aim to aid readers in figuring out the truth behind pessimistic
warnings of future problems in health care and policy for the
elderly and describe how these focus on the wrong issues. Instead,
they focus on system-wide health-care cost issues, retirement and
personal pensions, problems with raising the retirement age, and
the myth that the country will be ruled by the aged.
*Reference & Research Book News*
An insightful book about growing old in America by two of the
country's leading policy gerontologists is must reading, especially
because 76 million baby boomers are approaching retirement. Perhaps
more to the point, can a balance be struck between the deserving
poor and what is perceived to be greedy geezers?. . . This is a
remarkable book that merits our immediate and full attention. The
authors point out that instead of giving in to negative Nellies,
the time has come for expert analysis, balanced viewpoints and a
united effort so that we can secure our futures. Dispelling popular
myths and misconceptions, Aging Nation maps out a comprehensive,
sensible plan that deserves our consideration.
*Tucson Citizen (Arizona)*
. . . this book provides a well-reasoned and readable antidote to
the more hyperbolic and even hysterical claims of the 'doomsayers'
documented by the authors. But more more than that, this is a
thorough, insightful, and readable analysis of the key elements of
financial security in retirement--Social Security, private
pensions, employment, and health and long-term care.
*Journal of Pension Economics and Finance*
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