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Speaker
NEIL HOWE
Subjects
generational
Video Clip
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Neil
Howe, best-selling author and national speaker, is a renowned
authority on generations in America. He gives readers and audiences
powerful insights into who today’s generation are, what motivates
them as consumers and workers, and how they will shape our national
future. He is a great choice for any forward-looking organization
that wants to grasp the big picture. Howe’s broadly cyclical
perspective—oriented around familiar generational life stories—will
put “the long term” into a stunning yet personal focus that will not
soon be forgotten.
A historian, economist, and demographer, Howe is a founding partner
of the consulting firm LifeCourse Associates. He is a marketing,
personnel, and government affairs consultant to corporate and
nonprofit clients, and has spoken and written extensively on the
collective personalities of today’s generations—who they are, what
motivates them, and how they will shape America’s future. He is also
a recognized authority on global aging, long-term fiscal policy, and
migration. His current titles include: public policy advisor to the
Blackstone Group, senior advisor to the Concord Coalition, and
senior associate to the Center for Strategic and International
Studies.
Howe has
coauthored several books on generations with William Strauss, all
best sellers widely used by businesses, colleges, government
agencies, and political leaders of both parties. Their first book,
Generations
(1991) is a history of America told as a sequence of generational
biographies. Generations, said
Newsweek,
is “a provocative, erudite, and engaging analysis of the rhythms of
American life.” Vice President Al Gore called it “the most
simulating book on American history that I have ever read” and sent
a copy to every member of Congress. Newt Gingrich called it “an
intellectual tour de force.” Howe’s second book on generations,
13th Gen
(1993) remains the best-selling nonfiction book ever written about
Generation X. Of Howe and Strauss’s third book,
The Fourth Turning
(1997) Dan Yankelovich said, “Immensely stimulating…We will never be
able to think about history in the same way.” The
Boston Globe
wrote, “If Howe and Strauss are right, they will take their place
among the great American prophets.”
Strauss and Howe’s 5th book,
Millennials Rising
(2000) has been widely quoted in the media for its insistence that
today’s new crop of teens and kids are very different from
Generation X, and, on the whole, doing much better than most adults
think. “Forget Generation X-and Y, for that matter,” says
The Washington
Post,
“The authors make short work of most media myths that shape our
perceptions of kids these days.” LifeCourse Associates has since
released several application books on Millennials—including a
Recruiting
Millennials Handbook
for the United States Army (2001),
Millennials Go To
College
(2003) and
Millennials and the Pop Culture
(2005). Neil Howe’s work with Millennials in colleges and in the
military was recently featured by CBS’ 60 MINUTES.
Millennials Go
To College
(second edition) and
Millennials in the
Workplace
are soon to be released.
Previously, with Peter G. Peterson, Howe coauthored
On Borrowed Time
(1989; reissued 2004), a pioneering call for budgetary reform.
According to Harvard’s Martin Feldstein, former Chairman of the
President’s Council on Economic Advisors, “This book should be read
by everyone who wants to understand how government spending can be
controlled."
Howe’s articles have appeared in
The Atlantic,
The Washington
Post,
The New York
Times,
American Demographics,
USA Weekend,
and other national publications. He has drafted several Social
Security reform plans and testified on entitlements many times
before Congress. He has written extensively on budget policy and
aging and on attitudes toward economic growth, social progress, and
stewardship. He coauthors the “Facing Facts” faxletter for the
Concord Coalition, an NTUF chartbook series,
Entitlements and
the Aging of America,
numerous studies for CSIS (including the Global Aging Initiative’s
Aging Vulnerability Index and The Graying of the Middle Kingdon: The
Economics and Demographics of Retirement Policy in China).
Howe grew up in California, received his B.A. at U.C. Berkeley,
studied abroad in France and Germany, and later earned graduate
degrees in economics (M.A., 1978) and history (M.Phil., 1979) from
Yale University. He currently lives in Great Falls, Virginia, with
his wife, Simona, and two Millennial children, Giorgia and
Nathaniel.
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56 Poquonock Avenue
Windsor, Connecticut 06095
Voice: 800-875-2893
Fax: 860-687-1062
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