Americans Are Getting Older and Not Giving Up Their Cars
(Bloomberg View) -- The U.S. population will exceed 400 million by 2060, according to Census Bureau projections released this week. That includes an increase in the older population that will have major implications for American transportation.
While the size of each age group is expected to grow, the teenage population will rise only 8 percent as the group over 65 nearly doubles in size, growing by 45 million and accounting for more than half the total expansion.
By 2040, there will be more people over 65 than under 18. And by 2060, the over-65 cohort will be nearly as big as the 45-to-64 cohort.
While these are only projections, it’s clear that in the next few decades it will become vital to meet the transportation needs of an aging population. And unlike younger people who increasingly use transport as a service, older people still prefer at least the option to drive themselves.
Since 1995, the number of 16-year-olds who have a driver’s license has dropped by almost 40 percent, while the number of 85-year-olds who have one has increased by more than half.
Today, barely a quarter of 16-year-olds are licensed to drive -- and more than 60 percent of those over 85 are. Licensed drivers as a percentage of population have fallen for every group younger than 55.
There’s still no guarantee that American teenagers won’t want a car at some point in their lives, or won’t prefer to drive (or walk, cycle, or use a OneWheel or Boosted board or a Lime-S or whatever else might provide transport) rather than be driven. There’s also no way to tell whether all older people with licenses are actively driving; a license is also valid identification, after all.
Perhaps younger people obtain licenses because they want them, while older people keep them because they need them. A younger person, especially in a city, has access to many modes of transport, from parents to hailed cars to dockless bikes. An older person, especially one living alone in a suburb or rural area, will have few options other than a personal car.
Roads filled with fewer young, alert (if distractible) drivers and more older, potentially less aware drivers is probably not an ideal recipe for safety. But it is an opportunity for new mobility services.
Weekend reading
- Bloomberg’s Hyperdrive examines driverless delivery vehicles and finds that the last 50 feet of delivery is still a human-centered challenge.
- Volkswagen AG has secured $25 billion worth of batteries for electric vehicles, and it will equip 16 factories to make EVs by 2022.
- General Motors Co. plans to launch an Airbnb-style peer-to-peer car-sharing program this summer.
- Lyft Inc. strikes a partnership with North America’s biggest auto parts supplier to jointly fund and develop self-driving vehicle technology.
- Lyft is also testing monthly subscription plans of 30 or 60 rides at a flat fee.
- Air-taxi maker Cora is out of stealth mode and testing in New Zealand.
- Record-low U.S. unemployment means both pulling in workers and automating labor.
- Today’s automation boom could be followed by a bust.
- Startup founders outside Silicon Valley are doing something new: staying put rather than going west.
- Natural disasters cost developing nations nearly $100 billion in lost crops and livestock from 2005 to 2015.
- Norway’s state oil and gas company has changed its name from Statoil to Equinor, and it has the rebranding video to prove it.
- Apple Inc.’s push for paper packaging has been a boon for the world’s oldest corporation, Stora Enso.
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This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.
Nathaniel Bullard is an energy analyst, covering technology and business model innovation and system-wide resource transitions.
To contact the author of this story: Nathaniel Bullard at nbullard@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Brooke Sample at bsample1@bloomberg.net.
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