Elderly population growing markedly, census finds
Winston-Salem Journal - The elderly population in Northwest North Carolina mountain counties is growing markedly, according to recent census estimates.
The numbers support a common perception that a lot of retirees are moving to the area. Experts say that improved medical care also promotes longer life spans that account for part of the increase.
Census data in a statistical area made up of Ashe, Watauga, Avery, Mitchell and Yancey counties show that 17.6 percent of the household population now is older than 65. That compares with 11.7 percent of household population older than 65 in North Carolina as a whole.
A recent study that ranked states according to the number of new elderly residents showed North Carolina in third place, after Florida and Arizona, said Ed Rosenberg, the director of the gerontology graduate program at ASU.
Census estimates show an 11.8 percent drop in ages 35 to 44 in Ashe, Watauga, Avery, Mitchell and Yancey counties. Those figures are more a reflection of cycles of births and the age groupings of the statistics than an exodus of young-er people leaving the mountains, Rosenberg said.
He said, however, that the aging mountain population will more than double in the coming decades.
Rosenberg has gathered figures that predict a 150 percent increase by 2030 in the number of people 65 and older in Ashe, Burke, Avery, Caldwell, Wilkes and Watauga counties. There is a similar increase for the population of people 85 and older.
“We’re going to look very different in the Western part of the state in another 20 to 25 years,” Rosenberg said. Read full article