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EU Presidency Statement - The 2nd World Assembly on Ageing

Summary: April 9, 2002: Speech by the President of the Spanish Government, José M. Aznar, at the 2nd World Assembly on Ageing (9-12 April 2002), (Madrid)

Your Highness, Secretary General - and on behalf of everyone here may I wish you a very happy birthday, in the hope that the next 64 years bring you as much as the first 64 - President of the General Assembly, Heads of State and Government, Ministers, Ambassadors and Members of the delegations of the countries meeting here,
Aznar
Welcome to Spain. We Spaniards feel especially honoured by your presence and by the fact that you have chosen our nation to discuss and adopt a plan of action that I hope will mark a historic landmark and serve as a reference for future decision-taking on the issues that we are about to address.

There were many reasons for the Spanish Government to offer Spain as a venue for this global event:

Since the last Assembly on ageing held in Vienna in 1982, the demographic structure of most of our countries has changed considerably, and the ageing of the population has made even more rapid advances than had been expected.

In the least developed countries, although it is not strictly possible to talk about "ageing"", some symptoms are beginning to be observed that enable us to predict a major transformation in their populations.

In the developed countries we have already for a number of years been witnessing an increase in the proportion of older people relative to the population as a whole, while at the same time it is seen that our older people, fortunately, live increasingly longer. In the European countries - the so-called "old continent", we have long experience in this connection.

The ageing of a population with an adequate birth rate that is moving towards a balanced population is not the same thing as the ageing of a society that endangers the passing on of the baton to the next generation, as well as its own subsistence.

The ageing of a population motivated by the free and responsible adjustment of families to new living conditions is not the same thing as ageing that takes place as the result of population loss caused by war, forced exile, or a terrible epidemic such as AIDS.

There can be no doubt that population-ageing is a complex process which has many causes, and many different consequences.

Independently of how it may be considered, ageing is already "a fact" for many of us - a new and undeniable phenomenon that requires profound changes and resolute responses on the part of all of society's structures and institutions.

I am of the opinion that institutions in general, and governments in particular, must be realistic and adapt our action to what people decide freely and responsibly, rather than try to influence their decisions in order to make them fit in to a model that we - perhaps in a logical and orderly manner - have planned beforehand. However, we still are responsible for acting - above all through education and social policies, to ensure that individual conduct will, in a natural way, incorporate civic behaviour imbued with a spirit of solidarity. This is not only on account of the need for a social pact that makes harmonious living possible, but above all because through civic behaviour people fully develop their humanity and find true quality of life.

When we see that in our societies, life is not respected, that the family is not valued, that children are not wanted and old people are not cared for … then we know that something is not right. It is then that we have to act decisively because the problem is not that our society has grown old, but rather than it is weak, ill, without a future.

The challenge facing many countries is that of adapting our society to this new reality, while anticipating the possible negative effects deriving from ageing, and at the same time removing the obstacles that can impede its balanced and harmonious development.

As proposed to us by the motto of this Assembly, we need to collectively generate a cultural change that allows for the creation of "societies for all ages", in which neither older people, nor any other person, on account of sex, health, race or religion, feels excluded.

At the present time the mental faculties of a 60 year-old are the same as those of a middle-aged person some years ago. This new circumstance is evidence of the important role that older people can continue to play in the professions, in politics, in social life, or in intellectual and cultural training.

Countries with older populations must increasingly promote "active ageing" through policies of preventive medicine, continued learning and a flexible work schedule. All that, apart from making good use of the human potential of older people, will help to meet the possible costs deriving from the new population structure.

A country that fails to offer opportunities for active participation to its older people is a country that is missing opportunities. But it is above all a country that is preventing many useful and capable people from continuing to contribute well-being to others as well as a sense of satisfaction to their own lives. It is not so much a matter of "making them feel useful" as of convincing ourselves that they really are useful, and of allowing them to prove it.

Our society needs to recognise the role that older people have played throughout their lives, and can still play. They must be recognised for what they can still do, but above all, for what they themselves are. That is because older people, like any other healthy or sick people, rather than "being useful" are "worth" something.

That is why the family is such an important institution. It is because it is in families, and through the inter-generational relations that are found in families - based on affection, freely offered, that we mainly learn to appreciate people - whether old or young, healthy or ill, for what they themselves are.

That is why it is so important that governments acknowledge, facilitate and reward this work that families are doing in way that is disinterested but clearly to the benefit of society as a whole. That is why it is so important for governments to collaborate, by providing them with the necessary help for the care and attention of older people, and ensuring that they will have access to the services of all kinds that will help them in their task.

Apart from ensuring the perfect integration of the rapidly-growing older population into society, the countries which are addressing such processes have to anticipate the effects that aging has on the economic, social and health policies of each of them.

As many of those present know, Spain currently holds the presidency of the European Union Council. In my capacity as President of this Council, I can assure you that the ageing of the European population and all the economic and social changes that this process involves, are reflected directly or indirectly in many of the priority courses of action that we are promoting.

And I want to say that we must under no circumstances treat these consequences lightly, or look away from them, or fail to be aware of the enormous changes we have ahead of us.

The ageing of the population in many developed countries, especially in Europe and in Spain, will require profound changes to our health systems in order to cope with the increased longevity of our people, which is a good thing, and with the care they need, which may be more intensive and of longer duration.

It will also require a change in our pension systems. It will require changes in the organisation of labour and in working hours. It will require changes in the age of retirement, changes in our policies on demography and the birth rate. It will require changes in our policies on immigration, which of course form part of the new problems facing many countries.

It would be desirable if not only the European countries, but also all the countries that are gathered here, were to recognise the depth of the changes that are taking place, and were to react in a responsible way, co-operating under United Nations auspices in order to transform these new challenges into opportunities for assuring the integral development of our societies.

Mr. Secretary General,

I wish to thank the United Nations Organization, and all those who have collaborated in making this Assembly possible, for the opportunity that you have given us on bringing us together to discuss an issue of such importance. I am sure that approval, with a wide margin of consensus, of the International Action Plan will serve as a guide for our policies in the coming decades

Thank you very much.


  • Ref: PRES02-051EN
  • EU source: EU Presidency
  • UN forum: Third Committee (Social, Humanitarian and Cultural Affairs)
  • Date: 9/4/2002


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European Union Member States