Older consumers have learned new tricks in the pandemic
Companies had better keep up
BABY BOOMERS, aged 57-75, are as the name implies, plentiful. Healthier and more adventurous than similarly aged cohorts in the past, since 2018 over-65s have outnumbered the under-fives. They are also wealthier. America’s boomer-led households spend $64,000 a year, almost twice as much as those headed by youngsters born from 1997 onwards. Together with the earlier “silent” generation, they account for two-fifths of American consumer spending. Yet brands and retailers have long given older shoppers short shrift, focusing most of their attention on the wrinkle-free. As with many things, the pandemic is demanding a rethink.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “The boomer boom”
Business May 8th 2021
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- Can human creativity prevent mass unemployment?
- America wants to waive patent protection for vaccines
- Older consumers have learned new tricks in the pandemic
- Apple may win a court battle but lose a regulatory war
- Private equity is losing its mystique
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