Facing old age : a study of old age dependency in the United States and old…

"Facing old age" by Abraham Epstein is a social policy study written in the early 20th century. It argues that modern industrial life, inadequate wages, and weakened family support leave many Americans unable to sustain themselves in later years, and it evaluates charity, savings, and pension schemes—domestic and foreign—to press for a constructive public solution. The opening of the study is an explicit call for social action: Epstein, drawing on intensive work in Pennsylvania, concludes that only organized social insurance or public pensions can meet the problem that private charity and employer plans fail to solve. An introduction by John B. Andrews situates old age alongside accident, sickness, and unemployment, noting America’s recent progress on compensation and mothers’ aid while stressing that old-age poverty remains largely hidden and untreated outside public-employee systems. The first chapters contrast earlier social orders—where elders retained roles or support—with the modern factory system that “scraps” older workers, shows why most cannot save amid rising living costs and fractured families, and traces the almshouse as the all-too-common end. Epstein then marshals data: the elderly share of the population is growing even as employment after 55 drops sharply, disability days climb steeply with age, and hazardous trades (steel, mining, railroads) force many out before 60; union rolls contain few members over 60. He distinguishes three groups in old age (secure, struggling but “non-dependent,” and dependent) and, using commission and census findings, shows that most institutional entrants arrive after 60, men are overrepresented, the single and widowed without children are most at risk, health impairments are widespread, prior work is largely unskilled, and home ownership and incomes are thin. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Read or download for free

For an overview of the different reading options, see our Reading Guide

Reading Options Url Size
Read now! https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77562.html.images 887 kB
EPUB3 (E-readers incl. Send-to-Kindle) https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77562.epub3.images 1.2 MB
EPUB (older E-readers) https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77562.epub.images 1.3 MB
EPUB (no images, older E-readers) https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77562.epub.noimages 390 kB
Kindle https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77562.kf8.images 1.6 MB
older Kindles https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77562.kindle.images 1.6 MB
Plain Text UTF-8 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77562.txt.utf-8 726 kB
Download HTML (zip) https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/77562/pg77562-h.zip 5.4 MB
There may be more files related to this item.

About this eBook

Author Epstein, Abraham, 1892-1942
LoC No. 22006629
Title Facing old age : a study of old age dependency in the United States and old age pensions
Original Publication New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1922.
Credits Richard Tonsing, Charlene Taylor, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
Language English
LoC Class HD: Social sciences: Economic history and conditions, Production
Subject Old age pensions -- United States
Subject Industrial life insurance
Subject Social security
Category Text
EBook-No. 77562
Release Date
Copyright Status Public domain in the USA.
Downloads 1895 downloads in the last 30 days.
Project Gutenberg eBooks are always free!