No generation in history has been more analyzed, scrutinized, hypothesized, advertised, and capitalized than the baby boomers. All through my life, economists and business professionals have been studying this anomaly in American reproductive history like watching a golf ball work its way through a garden hose. At the end of World War II, Americans came home from abroad, reunited with their loved ones and started families. The resulting effect of this was a surge in population. Historians and economists recognized the large and historic increase in babies being born from 1946 to 1964 and have been monitoring them ever since, like a mass population version of The Truman Show (a movie starring Jim Carrey where television crews follow a single individual his entire life). Click here to read the full article…