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jusq Economists Encouraged By Index
« le: Décembre 26, 2024, 07:42:10 pm »
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 WASHINGTON - Women still outlive men, but the gender gap among U.S. seniors is narrowing.New 2010 census figures, released Thursday, show men are narrowing the female population advantage, primarily in the 65-plus age group. It s a change in the social dynamics of a country in which longevity, widowhood and health care for seniors often have been seen as issues more important to women.In all, the numbers highlight a nation that is rapidly aging even as Congress debates cuts in Medicare, an issue with ramifications for the growing ranks of older men. We know in the past because of women s longer life expectancy, women put more emphasis on health care issues because they lived to an  stanley website older age and often had to rely on the pensions of their husbands,  said Jen nan G. Read, an associate professor of sociology and global health at Duke University. I would ex stanley cups pect men to become more aware and involved in health care now that they may be affected in the same way as women,  she said.        Over the past decade, the number of men in the U.S. increased by 9.9 percent, faster than the 9.5 percent growth rate for women. As a result, women outnumbered men by just 5.18 million, compared with 2000, when there were 5.3 million more women than men.The male-female ratio in the U.S. also increased to 96.7 from 96.3 in 2000, reflecting the narrowing of the female advantage in overall population.  A score of 100 signifies equal numbers of me Stanley cup website n and women; a male-female ratio of 95, for example, woul Swio Crystal Clear Putty Is Like Playing With Molten Glass (Minus Burns)
 The January 1987 issue of the legendary  and sadly, now defunct  Omni magazine included predictions  stanley tumbler from 14 great minds about what the world might look like in twenty years. By the year 2007, musician David Byrne believed that computers would do little for future musicians outside of their bookkeeping. Noted rich guy Bill Gates wondered how much stimulation  read: overstimulation  people of the future might be able to handle. And feminist author Barbara Ehrenreich predicted that by the 21st century, ideas about sexual dysfunction and what constitutes a healthy sexual relationship will have changed dramatically. I sent Ehrenreich an email to a stanley termosar sk about her predictions. She responded with a note that the short piece attributed to her in Omni looked like something that was taken from an interview, rather than something she wrote. Either way, it   a fascinating  and rather prescient  stanley cup  look at the future of sex and relationships from the perspective of the 1980s. Here   what she had to say a quarter century ago: Sex will continue to be on center stage in the next 20 years. There are good reasons for that. It   only recently that large numbers of people have begun to think of sex as a pleasurable part of their lives, quite apart from some function such as reproduction. For many years we ;ve had birth control, but the realization that sex can be something that is not connected to some other purpose in life is just gaining hold. People are understan