Neil Howe is an American author and consultant. He is best known for his work with William Strauss on social generations regarding a theorized generational cycle in American history. Howe is currently the managing director of demography at Hedgeye and he is president of Saeculum Research and LifeCourse Associates, consulting companies he founded with Strauss to apply Strauss–Howe generational theory. He is also a senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies' Global Aging Initiative, and a senior advisor to the Concord Coalition.
Biography
Howe was born in Santa Monica, California. His grandfather was the astronomer Robert Julius Trumpler. His father was a physicist and his mother was a professor of occupational therapy. He attended high school in Palo Alto, California, and earned a BA in English Literature at U.C. Berkeley in 1972. He studied abroad in France and Germany, and later earned graduate degrees in economics and history from Yale University. After receiving his degrees, Howe worked in Washington, D.C., as a public policy consultant on global aging, long-term fiscal policy, and migration. His positions have included advisor on public policy to the Blackstone Group, policy advisor to the Concord Coalition, and senior associate for the Global Aging Initiative at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. During the 1990s, Howe developed a second career as an author, historian and pop sociologist, examining how generational differences shape attitudes, behaviors, and the course of history. He has since written nine books on social generations, mostly with William Strauss. In 1997 Strauss and Howe founded LifeCourse Associates, a publishing, speaking, and consulting company built on their generational theory. As president of LifeCourse, Howe currently provides marketing, personnel, and government affairs consulting to corporate and nonprofit clients, and writes and speaks about the collective personalities of today's generations. Howe lives in Great Falls, Virginia, and has two young adult children.
Work
Howe has written a number of non-academic books on generational trends. He is best known for his books with William Strauss on generations in American history. These include Generations and The Fourth Turning which examine historical generations and describe a theorized cycle of recurring mood eras in American History. Generations made a deep impression on former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, who called it the most stimulating book on American history he'd ever read. He even sent a copy to each member of Congress. The Fourth Turning made a deep impression on Steve Bannon, who wrote and directed Generation Zero, a Citizens United Productions film on the book's theory, prior to his becoming White House Chief Strategist. Howe and Strauss also co-authored 13th Gen about Generation X, and Millennials Rising about the Millennial Generation. Eric Hoover has called the authors pioneers in a burgeoning industry of consultants, speakers and researchers focused on generations. He wrote a critical piece about the concept of "generations" and the "Millennials" for the Chronicle of Higher Education. Michael Lind offered his critique of Howe's book "Generations" for The New York Times Book Review. Howe has written a number of application books with Strauss about the Millennials’ impact on various sectors, including Millennials Go to College, Millennials and the Pop Culture, and Millennials and K-12 Schools. After Strauss died in 2007, Howe authored Millennials in the Workplace. In 1988, he coauthored On Borrowed Time with Peter G. Peterson, one of the early calls for budgetary reform. Since the late 1990s, Howe has also coauthored a number of academic studies published by CSIS, including the Global Aging Initiative’s Aging Vulnerability Index and The Graying of the Middle Kingdom: The Economics and Demographics of Retirement Policy in China. In 2008, he co-authored The Graying of the Great Powers'' with Richard Jackson.
Selected bibliography
On Borrowed Time
Generations
13th-GEN
The Fourth Turning
Global Aging: The Challenge of the Next Millennium