The Boomers Have Already Been Overtaken By the Millennials

Summary: Demographics is a key driver of economic growth. Most people focus on the aging of the Boomer generation. But the working-age population in the US has been growing almost as fast as the retirement of Boomers. Millennials are now the largest living generation and will be in the working-age population until well past 2050. "By 2030 the top 11 birth cohorts will be the youngest 11 cohorts. The movement of these younger cohorts into the prime working age is a key economic story in coming years."


Nearly 20 years ago, investors started becoming concerned about the aging demographic profile in the United States. The concern was understandable: the largest birth cohort in the nation's history was close to entering retirement. Between 1940 and 1950, the number of births per year in the US increased by a massive 45%, and that group would begin retiring in 2005. Enlarge any chart by clicking on it (data from Doug Short).



An aging population consumes and produces less, draws down savings and equity holdings and requires greater publicly-funded services. Japan had already started feeling the ill affects of a rapidly aging population and the fear was that the US was destined to be next.

What happened instead was this: an average of 3 million Boomers entered retirement every year starting in 2005, but the population of the country grew by nearly the same amount. Between 2005 and 2015, the total population of the US increased by more than 25 million.