12 People Who Are Changing Your Retirement

The Wall Street Journal:
Joseph Coughlin describes his work as “trying to get people to ‘age cool.’ ” More specifically, as director of AgeLab, a research program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he is pushing advances in transportation, health care and housing off drawing boards and into older adults’ lives.
And he can’t do it quickly enough.
“If we don’t hurry,” he says, “the products being designed now aren’t going to be there when the [baby] boomers need them.”
Prof. Coughlin is one of hundreds of people across the country whose work, in effect, is shaping the future of retirement. The motives may vary — educators, entrepreneurs, philanthropists and policy makers are all involved in the effort — but the goals are much the same: to learn about, and improve the quality of, later life.
Demographics, of course, explain the sense of urgency. Each day, on average, almost 8,000 people in the U.S. turn […]

Original post by Rich and software by Elliott Back

This entry was posted on Monday, February 25th, 2008 at 11:09 am and is filed under Retirement, Boomers, Trends. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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