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Thirty years ago, when compared to the U.S., England, France, and
Sweden, Japan had the lowest life expectancy for males and females.
Today, Japan has the highest life expectancy and is the world's
most rapidly aging society. Public Policy and the Old Age
Revolution in Japan captures the vitality of Japanese policymakers
and the challenges they face in shaping a modern society responding
to its changing needs. The rapid transition to an aging society
poses a set of complex policy and resource dilemmas; the responses
taken in Japan are of great value to policymakers, professionals,
and students in the fields of gerontology, Asian and Japanese
studies, sociology, public policy, administration and management,
and anthropology in other industrial aging societies. Readers of
Public Policy and the Old Age Revolution in Japan will discover the
array of social and economic implications that comes with an
increasingly aged society. Such a change in demographics affects
pension expenditures and pension contributions, capital formation
and savings rates, health costs, service systems, tax bases, labor
pools, career counseling, training, advertising, and marketing.
This book does not stop with these topics, however. Readers also
learn about: how older Japanese workers are staying employed and
employable policies in Japan for a smooth transition from work to
retirement Japan's Silver Human Resource Centers the new direction
of health services in Japan the Japanese financing system for
elderly health care the expansion of formalized in-home services
for Japan's aged Japanese housing policy and the concept of
universal design the Gold Plan, a comprehensive ten-year plan to
promote health care and welfare for the aged the concept of
ikigai--promoting feelings of purpose and self-worth in the
agedPublic Policy and the Old Age Revolution in Japan is one of
only a handful of books prepared in English by American and
Japanese authors for an international audience about aging and
social policy in Japan. The book's recent collection of articles by
leading scholars on the subject makes it a unique and timely source
of information. Above all, Public Policy and the Old Age Revolution
in Japan makes it clear that the rest of the world has many
valuable lessons to learn by studying Japan's approach to its
rapidly aging society.
Within the context of long-range planning, this book examines the
changing responsibilities of the state and family toward elders in
different societies around the world. International Perspectives on
State and Family Support for the Elderly presents a fresh range of
lucid analyses of family caregiving policy from Canada, the United
States, Sweden, the United Kingdom, Hong Kong, Austria, Denmark,
Israel, and the People's Republic of China. Different institutional
structures, levels of economic development, and cultural values,
among other factors, impact policy development in various
countries. With the information examined in this book, readers can
gain an understanding of elder care in other societies, which can
help them in developing policies for their own countries.Authors of
International Perspectives on State and Family Support for the
Elderly address questions such as: Who is responsible for caring
for the aged? What are the policy issues that determine how such
care is handled in various countries? Are the underlying principles
upon which policy is based changing? Who pays for the care of the
aged? What is the balance of the roles of government, family, and
community? Along with these questions, authors discuss: the
importance of family care the well-being, payment, and rights of
informal caregivers providing services for informal caregivers
shifting the burden of care from formal organizations to families
the effects of governmental frameworks on caregiving the impact of
the political agenda on caregiving caregiving and the welfare
stateInternational Perspectives on State and Family Support for the
Elderly contains information for all professionals interested or
involved in developing policy for the elderly. Demographers,
sociologists, social workers, health care and public health
professionals, gerontologists, and advanced students in these
fields will find this book a helpful guide in their studies.
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