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Few are more vexed in ageing Britain than how to pay for long-term care for the elderly.
ECONOMIST: The answer is postponed once again
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OECD, Mandeep Bains and Howard Oxley, Ageing-related Spending Projections on Health and Long-term Care, 2003.
ECONOMIST: Sources and acknowledgements
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There is also widespread concern about the long-term costs of today's fiscal props for a rapidly ageing economy.
ECONOMIST: Rebalancing the world economy: Germany
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But the RCN says it can see no justification for a decline in nursing numbers at a time of increasing demand for care, with an ageing population, and growing numbers or patients with long-term conditions such as diabetes and kidney disease.
BBC: Nurses warn of 'workforce crisis' in NHS
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The costs of the social-security system are set to soar, in the short term because of the slump and in the long run because the country is ageing so fast.
ECONOMIST: Germany's election
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But in the long term later retirement counters the trend to slowing labour force growth caused by an ageing population, more years spent in college, and a levelling out of women's participation.
ECONOMIST: Older workers and the recession
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This, the inevitable result of a pay-as-you-go system in an ageing population, is the cause of the programme's long-term financial problems.
ECONOMIST: Social Security reform ventures out in the open
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The ageing population and advances in medicine mean more and more people are living with chronic long-term conditions, such as heart disease and dementia, for which there is no cure.
BBC: Stafford Hospital: the scandal that shames the NHS