标题: Well-Off American Seniors and Hardscrabble Japanese Counterparts [打印本页] 作者: choi 时间: 8-8-2012 15:36 标题: Well-Off American Seniors and Hardscrabble Japanese Counterparts Compare
(1) In US.
(a) Haya El Nasser, Life Is Good for Older Americans, Poll Finds; Despite national groom, seniors are largely content, optimistic and financially secure. USA Today, Aug 8, 2012 (front page) http://www.usatoday.com/news/nat ... tirement/56860194/1
("Why are seniors so upbeat when many other Americans are not in a very happy place? 'People in retirement have dodged a bullet,' says William Frey, demographer at the Brookings Institution. 'They've gotten to the promised land in time to avoid all the bad stuff.' This generation of retirees, including the oldest Baby Boomers, who turn 66 this year, are more likely to enjoy the fruits of their life-long labors than future retirees, Frey says. They stopped working before employers pulled the plug on pension plans, before companies stopped matching contributions to 401(k)s and before Social Security and Medicare finances hit the crisis stage. As a result, today's retirees could be the last wave of happy seniors")
Note:
(i) The Muslim surname Nasser is from an Arabic personal name based on na?sir ‘granter of victory’.
(ii) Fort Mill, South Carolina http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Mill,_South_Carolina
(iii) bocce (n; Italian plural of boccia ball, from Vulgar Latin *bottia boss) www.m-w.com
My comment: The generation gap in this report is political rather than economical. There is no need toread the text (title said it all).
(2) Disaster and demography in Japan | Generational Warfare; Young and old have different ideas on how to rebuild tsunami-stricken communities. Economist, Aug 4, 2012. http://www.economist.com/node/21559932
Excerpt in the window of print: Generation Gap and Japan's Slow Rebuilding From Last Year's Calamities
translation: In the Hei-an period, in preparation for a battle against Genji army 安倍貞任 sheltered local women and children at 安野平. Because of this, a creek flows through the place was called 女川.
(b) Toshiaki YAGINUM
(c) Reconstruction Agency http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reconstruction_Agency
(復興庁; an administrative body of the Cabinet of Japan established on Feb 2, 2012 to coordinate reconstruction activities related to the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami and Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster)
(d) Hiroshi SUZUKI/ Fukushima University 鈴木 浩/ 福島大学