By 2026, the leading edge of the baby boomer generation hits 80—a watershed moment for America's economy. We're looking at the fastest demographic shift in modern history: aging populations colliding with historically low birth rates and people living longer than ever before.



Here's what matters: as this massive cohort transitions out of the workforce, you're seeing real pressure mounting on pension systems, healthcare infrastructure, and government programs. The economic implications are massive—labor shortages, shifting consumption patterns, strain on fiscal budgets.

For anyone tracking macro trends or thinking about long-term asset allocation, this demographic wave is worth watching. It reshapes everything from inflation expectations to policy priorities. The numbers are real, the timeline is fixed, and the market hasn't fully priced in what comes next.
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