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THEME OF THE WEEK:
The institutions that shape how we work, retire, and age are finally confronting a reality they can no longer postpone — people will live to 100, and every system — from employee benefits to senior housing to healthcare — must be redesigned around that fact.
WEEK IN LONGEVITY SNAPSHOT:
This week made one thing unmistakable: the hundred-year life is no longer a thought experiment but an economic and political reality demanding institutional redesign. AARP revealed that Americans over 50 now account for 43% of U.S. GDP, while new research showed AI is tilting labor market leverage toward experienced workers rather than replacing them. Meanwhile, MIT AgeLab launched a tool exposing how unprepared most people remain for longer lives, Lithuania brought longevity into its parliament, and the UK mobilized a national campaign against workplace ageism.
By Emilio UmeokaTHEME OF THE WEEK:
The institutions that shape how we work, retire, and age are finally confronting a reality they can no longer postpone — people will live to 100, and every system — from employee benefits to senior housing to healthcare — must be redesigned around that fact.
WEEK IN LONGEVITY SNAPSHOT:
This week made one thing unmistakable: the hundred-year life is no longer a thought experiment but an economic and political reality demanding institutional redesign. AARP revealed that Americans over 50 now account for 43% of U.S. GDP, while new research showed AI is tilting labor market leverage toward experienced workers rather than replacing them. Meanwhile, MIT AgeLab launched a tool exposing how unprepared most people remain for longer lives, Lithuania brought longevity into its parliament, and the UK mobilized a national campaign against workplace ageism.