February 7, 2020

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Longer lives and lower birth rates strain family structures

Credit: City University London
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Credit: City University London

A new report by Cass Business School and the International Longevity Centre UK (ILC-UK), reveals that longer lives and lower birth rates are putting increasing strain on our family structures.

The report, "100-year : Longer lives, fewer children," highlights how the role and resilience of UK families has changed over time, and explores how it is coming under increasing pressure from external demographic and economic forces.

Key findings

Key recommendations

Report co-author Professor Les Mayhew, Cass Business School, said: "We set up our welfare state with the assumption of a nuclear family where we all pitch in and help with care. Our state and private expects families to support care for older people or for children. But it also expects family members to work. Are we asking families to do too much and is the state and failing us all?"

David Sinclair, director, ILC-UK, said: "We are living longer and having fewer children and as a result, our families look very different to what they did 100 years ago. Yet government hasn't caught up with this change. Too much public policy is focused on the needs of individuals rather than modern families.

"And the insurance sector has failed to really understand how changing families might want and need different products. There is a potential longevity dividend for the industry if it can adapt products and services to better meet the needs of the modern family."

More information: The 100 year family: Longer lives, fewer children: ilcuk.org.uk/the-100-year-family/

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