Research and Markets: Tomorrow's United States - Order Report Now

* Reuters is not responsible for the content in this press release.

Tue May 19, 2009 9:57am EDT

DUBLIN--(Business Wire)--
Research and Markets
(http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/15daf9/tomorrows_united) has
announced the addition of the "Tomorrow's United States" report to their
offering. 

The Tomorrow series of reports deliver a demographic and socio economic blue
print of the future for over 71 countries, providing all the facts necessary to
make informed business decisions about strategies for the future. 

The report examines how the United States population will change between 2009
and 2029 in terms of age, household structure, education and labour force
profiles. In terms of the population it also shows how the different lifecycle
stages (e.g. young single; married with at least one child under 10 yrs; etc)
will change in size and importance over time. 

The final section of the report examines the trend in average household income
and the distribution of households by income. In the case of the United States
this is done for both urban and rural households as well as total Households.
The analysis shows how the size of 5 key income groups will change overtime
given a particular GDP growth assumption. Finally the report looks at the
pattern of household expenditure that is expected to emerge given changes in
income, household structure and age profile. 

This report is underpinned by an extensive historical database from 1990 to
2007, and a proprietary forecasting model which uses historical relationships to
forecast to 2029. 

Key Topics Covered:

* Summary 
* Overall Population Trends 
* The Household 
* Lifecycle Profile of the Population 
* Urbanisation 
* Education 
* Employment 
* Household Incomes 
* Country Summary Profile 
* Copyright

For more information visit
http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/15daf9/tomorrows_united



Laura Wood
Senior Manager
press@researchandmarkets.com
Fax from USA: 646-607-1907
Fax from rest of the world: +353-1-481-1716 

Copyright Business Wire 2009

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