Kenya's Increasing Older Population: A Case for Retooling Our Perspectives
Abstract
This paper, which is an extract from a major study conducted by the author, makes an attempt to
understand Kenya’s changing demographics in the light of burgeoning numbers of the older persons
over the 1979-1999 census years1. With a study population of older persons aged 60 years and above in
Lamu, Turkana and Nairobi districts, a sample of 100 older persons from each of the areas was drawn
using both respondent-driven and random sampling techniques. The ageing population progression
experiences of these districts easily portray the extent and intensity of the ageing phenomenon in
Kenya. The paper seeks to answer the question on the extent of the ageing phenomenon and its
regional distribution as well as the attendant ramifications. Are the numbers worth considering in
Kenya’s current policy decisions? The seemingly steady increase of older age groups in national
populations across the globe has major consequences and implications in all spheres of day-to-day
human life. Such increases are often accompanied by declines in the proportions of younger persons
aged 15 years and less. Whereas the declining fertility and mortality are welcome signs of relief for an
already overpopulated world, a swelling older population often points to unique challenges both in the
economic and social spheres. An examination of the speed, intensity and direction of the ageing
phenomenon in Kenya points to a rapid growth in this population segment. This presents the society
with the need to re-examine these changes with a view to rethinking and reorienting our paradigms and
adequately addressing the inherent challenges for posterity.