ABSTRACT

Over the past 150 years there have been profound changes in the sex and age structure of the United Kingdom, as, first, a rise in the size of birth generations made the age structure very young as compared with a stationary population supported by constant births and experiencing constant mortality and, later, a fall in the annual numbers of births produced an ageing of the population structure. This ageing has been accentuated by steady mortality improvement, more so for women than for men. Small contributions to the ageing of the population structure were made by the virtual cessation of any substantial emigration of young men after the world economic depression of 1930 and by the war losses of young men during 1914-1918 and during 1939-1945. All countries of advanced or advancing economic development have suffered these changes and, to the extent that many have in their economic development leapfrogged over the relatively slower industrial revolution of the United Kingdom, their changes in age structure have been more rapid and, in their economic implications, more violent. It is not the purpose of this chapter to make international demographic comparisions, but it is important to remember that any economic problems arising from the growth in the dimensions of elderly dependency are common to all developed countries and will sooner or later confront the developing countries.