Stock Market


Baby Boomers and Stocks

Marcus Roberts | 08 March 2012
 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to Demography is Destiny
rss RSS feed of posts

 Recent Posts
Japan - Where did the children go?
22 May 2013
Migrants set to become majority in UK
22 May 2013
A shortage of women workers in China pushes up wages
20 May 2013
Chinese Author Ma Jian and the One-Child Policy
17 May 2013
Bugs for Breakfast anyone?
15 May 2013

 MercatorNet blogs
Style and culture: Tiger Print
Family social policy: Family Edge
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
May 2013 | Apr 2013 | Mar 2013 | Feb 2013 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

Digital multitasking: scourge or blessing?
22 May 2013
How can we teach students to focus on what they ought to be doing?

Who or what is a “child”?
22 May 2013
Canada's Parliament lacks the courage to take a stand on defining when an unborn child will be protected by the…

We’re all mad here
21 May 2013
That's the message of the new edition of the bible for American psychiatrists, DSM-5. Diagnostic inflation is about to become…

Jolie’s Choice
20 May 2013
Angelina Jolie's decision to have a double mastectomy made headlines around the world. But is she sending women the right…

A fight for equality or a war on difference?
20 May 2013
To invite the government to give us phony equalities by recognising gay marriage is to invite greater state intervention into…


 Tags
Birth Control, University College London, Diabetes, demographic dividend, Sterilisation, Vladimir Putin, Gates Foundation, Portugal, democracy, family structure, Asia, Japan tsunami, funding, Pope Benedict XVI, Belfast, food security, Disabilities, population, Washington rally, family planning, Crime, volunteering, euthanasia, Religious Practice, Muslim-Christian demography, religion in public square, religion, youth bulge, Brazil, Indonesia, population ageing, Italy, Year of the Dragon, Belgium, business, Gender Imbalance, Prince Charles, Mo Yan, Royal Family, Statistics, austria, Francois Hollande, Educated women, Canna, Youth, International, Birth, Old age, The Economist, spending, economic crisis, youth unemployment, Economy, Intelligence, North Korea, BRICs, Population, United Nations, Hong Kong, Ma Jian, Paul Ehrlich, YouTube, Vatican, human rights, Middle East, Baby Bonus, presidential election, Famine, Demographic Intelligence, Cuba, Mortality, low fertility trap, 2012 elections, population estimates, wealth, Optimum Population Trust, gendercide, investment, Curtin University, South Korea, science, Nigeria, overpopulation, elderly, Steven Mosher, ageing, travel, World Bank, Minority Groups, jobs and economy, grandchildren, South Africa, Ageing, Mothers, Bulgaria, Nature magazine, total fertility rate, Bangladesh, Apocalypse, Russia,