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Anticipated Changes in NC

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Anticipated Changes in NC s Older Population: Preparation Presented to the NC Study Commission on Aging Jim Mitchell, Ph.D. Associate Director, UNC Institute on Aging – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anticipated Changes in NC


1
Anticipated Changes in NCs Older Population
Preparation
  • Presented to the NC Study Commission on Aging
  • Jim Mitchell, Ph.D.
  • Associate Director, UNC Institute on Aging
  • Director, Center on Aging, ECU, Brody School of
    Medicine

2
Immigration and Change in NCs Older Adult
Population
  • For decades, developers have marketed the appeal
    of NCs coastal, mountains, and sand hills areas
    to retirement eligible populations. Ultimately,
    all water-adjacent counties and municipalities
    will likely feel the effects of this trend.

3
Percent Change in Elderly Populations In the
Coastal Counties of Eastern North Carolina
Observed Percent Change In Municipal Populations
Aged 65 Years from 1980 to 2000
Center for Health Services Research and
Development East Carolina University Greenville,
NC
Data Source NC State Data Center LINC
4
Why Do Older People Move?
  • Move 1 In early retirement, higher-income
    relatively healthy people move for amenity
    reasons (vacation destinations) in combination
    with friendship networks. Psychologically
    committed to a move. Amenity-related services.
  • Move 2 Anticipating or experiencing disability
    or widowhood move closer to children. In-home or
    community-based assistance.
  • Move 3 Move to institutional settings in
    response to declining health or sudden-onset
    events compromising independence. Institutional
    or in-home skilled care.

5
What do we know about older movers?
  • Don Bradley (Sociology Department), with
    colleagues, analyzed data from 2000 U.S. Census
    five-percent Public Use Micro-data Areas
    comprising coastal NC. Each Area includes 100,000
    persons and over, creating clusters of coastal
    counties. The data come from people completing
    the long Census form for their household.

6
Top Sending States for Interstate Migrants to
Coastal North Carolina, Aged 60 1995-2000
Source 2000 US census, Five-Percent PUMS
7
Non-South Origin and Nativity of Interstate
Migrants Aged 60 1995-2000,
Source 2000 US census, Five-Percent PUMS
8
Population Aged 60 in Coastal Counties by
Mobility Status
Reported Disability
Source 2000 US census, Five-Percent PUMS
9
How do Interstate Migrants Aged 60 Compare with
Stable Residents Aged 60?
  • Migrants are younger than stable residents
    (average age 66 compared to 70).
  • Migrants are more likely than stable residents to
    be married and less likely to be widowed.
  • Migrants are better-educated than stable
    residents (33 college degree compared to 13).
  • Migrants are less likely to be disabled than
    stable residents (26.5 compared to 44).
  • Migrants and stable residents are equally likely
    to live in a single-family detached residence.
  • Average household income of migrants is higher
    than that of stable residents (59,449 compared
    to 37,926).
  • Average owner-occupied property value of migrants
    is substantially higher than that of migrants
    (193,908 compared to 116,608).

10
Older Migrants Are Not All Alike
  • Do repeat seasonal vacationers become retired
    immigrants?
  • Do healthy later-life migrants return home with
    the onset of disability, do they move closer to
    sources of assistance, or do they stay in their
    destination communities?
  • What draws older immigrants to different
    destinations (colonial history ecological
    education restaurant and entertainment
    availability and affordability fishing, sailing,
    or other recreational opportunities and a
    comparatively relaxed pace)?
  • Do older immigrants expect and request
    publicly-supported services beyond short-term
    benefits accrued from asset relocation and
    investment?
  • What is the effect of immigration on the
    sustainability of local ways of life (e.g.,
    Ocracoke watermens coop to preserve the only
    remaining fish house on silver lake, local
    efforts to preserve watermens access to the
    Marshallburg harbor, or the impact of rising tax
    values on Hyde and Beaufort County family farms)?

11
Preparedness is A Process
  • Migration among older people is fluid and
    changing. The dynamics, or reasons why older
    people move, their destinations, their resources,
    and the type of assistance they require varies.
  • Consequently, preparedness is viewed best as
    an on-going process fostering informed decisions
    about the allocation of resources to meet varying
    needs.

12
Proposed Retirement Migration InitiativeA
Sustained Cooperative Effort of the UNC Institute
on Aging and the NC Division of Aging and Adult
Services
Steering Committee
NC Division of Aging Adult Services
UNC Institute on Aging
Aging Migration Initiative East Carolina
University
UNC Partners
Local and State Government Policy
Constituencies
Chambers of Commerce
Area Agencies on Aging
13
Aging Migration Initiative East Carolina
University
  • The Initiative supports the on-going study of
    the dynamics and the impact of retirement
    migration.
  • Researchers representing multiple disciplines
    (Sociology, Anthropology, Economics, Political
    Science, Geography, Marine Resources, etc.)
    across campuses would participate in projects to
    describe and understand the consequences of
    migration of older people. Resulting information
    will be shared publicly and with entities
    responsible for state and local policy and
    resource allocation.
  • The advantage of this approach is that it is
    proactive, grounded in the anticipated
    consequences of inaction, rather than reactive.
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