How are learning, work, and care adapting to a world where people live longer? 

Demography is no longer a trend. It is reshaping economies, markets, and infrastructure.

A recent Financial Times analysis shows the scale of the shift: fewer workers supporting growing older populations, and welfare systems designed for shorter lives now straining. Productivity growth is slowing, and technology alone cannot close the gap. AI and automation are accelerating, with growing risks of inequality. Economic incentives are shifting, from migration policy to labour participation and family support. Ashoka Fellow Gautam Bharadwaj through PinBox Solutions, is working at one of the sharpest pressure points: redesigning pension systems to bring financial security to workers long excluded from formal retirement systems.

An analysis by the Paris-based think tank Club Landoy highlights a growing gap between global demographic change and local responses. Ageing is accelerating across regions, but solutions remain fragmented and difficult to scale.  Ashoka Fellow Dixon Chibanda’s Friendship Bench shows what this looks like, operating across 12 countries and embedded in Zimbabwe’s national mental health strategy, with a new UNESCO partnership expanding the model to 52 tertiary institutions nationwide.

 

In From Sprint to Marathon, Avivah Wittenberg-Cox reframes the life course for a longevity society, shifting from “front-loaded lives” to longer lives designed across multiple phases. Learning, earning, caregiving, and reinvention no longer follow a fixed sequence. They repeat across time. As the Stanford Centre on Longevity notes, the second half of life demands a new playbook, one that moves beyond adding years to increasing what Avivah calls “return on life.” This challenges systems still built for a single career peak and a defined exit, and calls for structures that support multiple transitions, meaning, and ongoing contribution. The Stanford Centre on Longevity’s SCL Magazine explores this shift further, highlighting how many are now entering an uncharted phase with few clear models to follow. Explore more insights

And in case you missed the Century Summit VI, the report further unpacks how longer lives are reshaping work and learning systems, calling for continuous reskilling and education across the lifespan. Explore the report 

A growing number of older adults are going back to school, not for credentials, but for purpose, connection, and continued growth, as highlighted in a recent Kiplinger article. Education is no longer a one-time phase. It is becoming a resource people return to across longer lives. This shift is being institutionalized through the Age-Friendly University Global Network, which is rethinking how universities serve learners across all ages. It was also reflected at the Longevity Innovations in Higher Education Summit at Arizona State University, where leaders explored how campuses can support intergenerational learning and age-inclusive practices. Explore more

As Brazil’s population ages rapidly, traditional labour models are struggling to keep up. A Fundação Getulio Vargas publication frames the challenge clearly: Work is a central lever for longer and healthier lives, requiring multi-generational teams, flexible pathways, and continued contribution across the life course. Ashoka Fellow Sérgio Serapião, through Labora, is enabling large-scale productive inclusion for professionals over 50, and in Chile, Ximena Abogabir, through Travesía100, is advancing similar models that enable older adults to remain active, engaged, and included across longer lives.

 

Longevity is not only about system efficiency. It is about how we care, connect, and contribute.

An India Development Review article shows how palliative care remains one of the most overlooked components of health systems, despite being essential to quality of life. In India, millions need it, yet only a small fraction receive it, reflecting systems that still prioritize cure over care. Often misunderstood as end-of-life care, it should be integrated earlier to relieve suffering and support families. At the same time, a Hindustan Times analysis highlights a different reality already unfolding. By 2047, nearly 300 million Indians will be over 60, many already working, mentoring, caregiving, and contributing to community life. An estimated 14 billion hours of caregiving and 2.6 billion hours of community support each year form a vast but largely invisible social infrastructure. As the report Longevity: A New Way of Understanding Ageing shows, the question is not willingness, but whether systems are designed to enable this contribution. 

 

“Care is not an individual act of devotion. It is a collective responsibility.” Laura Mauldin reflects In Sickness and in Health.

 

  • Ashoka Fellow Catalina Santana (Colombia), founder of Fundación 101 Ideas, is positioning longevity as a market shift, helping organizations redesign work, talent, and consumption systems so experience becomes a strategic asset and longer, multistage careers become the norm. Her latest report identifies eight trends already reshaping Colombia’s economy. Explore the trends

 

  • Ashoka Fellow Marc Freedman (USA), founder of CoGenerate, has seen the organization, in partnership with the Stanford Centre on Longevity, name six winners of the 2026 Big Ideas Challenge to Reimagine Higher Education, advancing new models where people of all ages can learn, live, and thrive together, signalling a shift toward lifelong learning systems.

 

  • Ashoka Fellow Edith Elliott (South & SE Asia), co-founder of Noora Health, is expanding the Care Companion Program into Nepal, now embedded across 17 health facilities, where caregiver training is integrated into care delivery, so families become active providers of care. By shifting knowledge from clinicians to households, the model reduces preventable complications and extends care beyond hospitals into homes. 

 

 

Welcome Change session: Join the 30-minute Welcome Change session with Ashoka Fellow Femke Groothuis on April 1, 2026, Hire, Don’t Buy, as she unpacks how current tax systems make work expensive and exclude millions from meaningful participation. By shifting taxes off labour and onto pollution and resource use, her approach opens new pathways for inclusion across longer lives. Register now

In 2026, we aim to support 10 new Ashoka Fellows advancing longevity by raising $1 million. Your contribution will help identify, elect, and scale these leaders, ensuring longer lives become better lives. Donate 

LinkedIn course: Avivah Wittenberg-Cox has unlocked two LinkedIn Learning courses on gender balance and leadership, offering practical tools to redesign how organizations approach talent, inclusion, and work across longer lives. Explore the courses.