Some Macroeconomic Consequences of the Demographic Transition Ronald
- Slides: 66
Some Macroeconomic Consequences of the Demographic Transition Ronald Lee UC Berkeley October 27 and 28, 2008 Research supported by NIA R 37 AG 025247 Thanks to Andy Mason and NTA country teams Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Main points, using National Transfer Accounts data 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Demographic transition first raises support ratio, then with population aging reduces it. Per capita consumption is proportionate to Support ratios, other things equal. “First dividend”, pop aging. Longer life, lower fertility, slower pop growth and older population all raise capital/labor ratio, raising labor productivity. “Second dividend”. This depends on importance of assets vs transfers. Lower fertility goes with greater investment in human capital per child, raising labor productivity. Effects on physical and human capital accumulation are more important than on dependency. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
I. Demographic Transition Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Pre fertility decline; child dependency ratio rises During fertility decline, child dependency ratio declines Population aging: old age dep ratio rises Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
The total dep ratio rises, falls, then rises again, ending up where it started. The changes in the total dependency ratio are transitory. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
But there is a big permanent change: At start, many children and few elderly. At end, few children and Many elderly. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Support ratio • Effective workers per effective consumers • Like inverse of dependency ratio • But based on age profiles of labor income and consumption (more on this later) Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Population aging First Dividend Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
II. The economic life cycle: • Concern about pop aging is mostly about old age dependency. • Sharpest concerns for age-sensitive public sector programs – pensions – health care – Long term care • But should place these in broader context – Full range of public programs – Private consumption – Labor across the life cycle Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Includes self employment, wages, unpaid family labor, & fringe benefits. Averages 0’s and both male and female. Includes both private expends and in-kind public transfers (health, education, long term care) Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based An. Chi Tung, Taiwan NTA
Flat cons age profile in adult years reflects extended family sharing. Quite different than most industrial nations. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based An. Chi Tung, Taiwan NTA
Large deficits at young and old ages. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based An. Chi Tung, Taiwan NTA
Reallocations from surplus to deficit ages required. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based An. Chi Tung, Taiwan NTA
Other incomes from assets, foreign loans, and remittances from abroad—it’s not all labor income. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based An. Chi Tung, Taiwan NTA
Asset income is partic Impt for old age Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based An. Chi Tung, Taiwan NTA
Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Components of US Consumption, 2003 Unlike Taiwan and other Third World, in US cons rises strongly with age. True in other industrial too. Later I will measure HK investment As sum of pub and priv spending on hlth and educ as shown here. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
• Levels of age profiles change fast with economic development. • Shapes of age profiles change slowly, • Are broadly similar across countries at very different levels of development. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Many policy possibilities to change the age profiles • labor income – – Later retirement (pension structure) Earlier entry into labor force Higher female labor force participation Reform seniority system • Change the age profile of consumption – In many industrial nations, the elderly consume much more than younger adults. – Makes population aging more costly – Role of public transfer policy: pensions, health care, long term care Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
III. Support Ratios • Effective labor is weighted sum of pop using labor income age profile. • Effective consumers is similar. • Ratio of effective labor to effective consumers is the “Support Ratio” (with fixed age profiles). • Other things equal, consumption per effective consumer is proportional to the support ratio. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
2008 Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on average NTA data
Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on average NTA data
Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on average NTA data
Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on average NTA data
IV. The Life Cycle Deficit Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Per capita consumption and labor income by age for Indonesia and Japan Indonesia, 2002 Japan, 2004 Indonesia NTA Maliki; Japan NTA Ogawa
Here are the aggregate flows: population by age times per capita age profiles Indonesia NTA Maliki; Japan NTA Ogawa
Aggregate flows • Green arrows show transfers from surplus of prime working years. • Red arrows show asset income consumed by elderly out of earlier savings. Indonesia NTA Maliki; Japan NTA Ogawa
Life cycle deficit • Consumption at age x not funded by labor income at that age • c(x) – yl(x) is per capita LCD • C(x) – Yl(x) is aggregate LCD • Or for an age segment: • C(65+) - Yl(65+), consumption by all those over 65 minus labor income for same. • Now measure as ratio to total consumption Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Japan Kenya Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Actual is 50% higher for oldest, Japan Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
The rising LCDs as the population ages translate into a rising demand for wealth. Individuals need some kind of claim on future resources to consume more than they expect in labor income. These claims are called “wealth” Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Why does the demand for wealth rise over the demographic transition? • Pure demographic composition effect – Older people need more wealth and hold more weatlh – in old population, there are more of them. • Also behavioral effects driven by demographic change: – Longer life means workers need to accumulate more wealth for longer old age (or work longer). – Lower fertility means adults consume more and need to save more to maintain in old age. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
VI. The role of intergenerational transfers • Wealth can be held in two forms: – Transfer wealth (expected future transfers received minus expected future transfers made) – Assets or Capital Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
NTA data gives shares of old age support from different sources • Asset income (land, equities, interest, etc. ) • Family transfers (not including bequests at death) • Public transfers (Pay As You Go pensions, health care, and long term care) • Triangle graph shows shares, not levels, so must add to 100%. • Bequests not included; just old age cons. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Familial transfers equally important in Thailand, Korea, and Taiwan (36 -40%). Net familial transfers near zero in US, CR, and J. Large public transfers in CR and J Net public transfers to elderly are zero in Thailand; about 25% in Taiwan and Korea. Ronald Lee 2008; from Andy Mason, NTA
Public transfers: Thailand none, Japan and Costa Rica around 70% US, Korea, Taiwan, middling Ronald Lee 2008; from Andy Mason, NTA
Reliance on assets : Japan, Taiwan, C. R. are low; Thailand high; US middling Ronald Lee 2008; from Andy Mason, NTA
VII. Demographic Transition and Capital Accumulation • Changing dependency gets most attention for ec dev and pop aging. • Changes in capital accumulation may be more important. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Simulating the demand for wealth and capital over the demographic transition • There are different theoretical approaches. We have used several. – Social Planner maximizing discounted social welfare function. – Individuals saving and consuming over their life cycles to maximize their life time utility, given different transfer systems. • Yield qualitatively similar result: capital intensity rises strongly over the demog transition. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Here take a different approach – no optimization--emphasizes institutional setting • Assume – share of old age consumption supported by asset income stays constant over time. – altruistic sharing maintains the shape of the cross sectional consumption age profile. – Demography is known in advance. • Can solve recursively for unique growth path and asset holdings. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Two scenarios: high level of transfers to elderly (65%) or low level (35%) as share of life cycle deficit. • Other assumptions – Productivity growth raises income age profile by 2% per year. – Open economy, so wages, interest rates are given. – rate of return on assets is 3%. • Aggregate saving is calculated to maintain asset share of old age consumption support. • Results will be shown relative to a 2% growth trajectory from prod gr. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
Simulated Saving Rate, ASEAN (S. E. Asian countries), 1950 -2050 Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Mason, Lee and Lee, 2008
Simulated Assets/Labor Income, ASEAN Ratio of assets to labor income rises greatly in any case, but 3 or 4 times as much with low IG transfers. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Mason, Lee and Lee, 2008
Simulated Consumption, ASEAN With low IG transfers, saving is higher from 1990 to 2020, reducing consumption. Thereafter, consumption is higher. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Mason, Lee and Lee, 2008
These sorts of results are qualitatively like those from optimization approaches • • • Timing of swings differs Level of savings rates differs Capital/labor income ratios differ Big picture is the same: 1. The demographic transition leads to a major increase in capital per worker. 2. The greater the role of transfers to the elderly, the smaller is the increase in capital intensity. 3. Eventually consumption rises with lower transfers, but initially it is lower. 4. Population aging leads to a decline in savings rates but an increase in capital intensity. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
VIII. Human capital and the demographic transition • Measure public and private expenditures on health and education at each age. – Sum these for health ages 0 -18 – Sum for education ages 0 -26 – Gives synthetic cohort HK investment per child • Construct ratio of HK to average yl(x)= ages 30 -49. • Plot log of HK/ against log of TFR. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country ,
Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
y = -1. 05*x + 1. 92 R 2 = 0. 62 Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
Now calculate total HK spending on all children • Multiply TFR times HK per child, and plot its log against log(TFR). Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
6. 8 years of labor income are invested in total HK on average. 1/12 of lifetime labor income for a couple. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
The standard Quantity-Quality model • Assume that the share of total labor income spent on HK is fixed, consistent with scatter plot. • Draw budget constraints for differing levels of income. • Quantity and quality interact multiplicatively in the budget constraint, both with positive income elasticities for constant price. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
Nonlinear Quantity-Quality budget constraint. Yn = lifetime income of a couple. Lines show different combinations of number and HK that = Yn/12 Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
With same data, plot ln(HK/w) instead of HK, against ln(TFR) instead of n. The budget lines collapse onto a single straight line. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
Ln(HK)/Yn Ln(TFR) Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
Slope (elasticity) = -1 Similar to empirical crossnational scatter plot. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
Association is non-causal • We don’t know whether fertility decline causes rising HK investments per child. • Desire to make bigger HK investments causes fertility decline. • Some other factor like rising income causes both fertility and HK changes as in quantity-quality theory. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
Production and Human capital • Human capital (HK) Baseline Specifications – Portion of wage, W(t), workers invest in their children is inversely related to their fertility, F(t) – Human capital of workers one period later is – HK(t+1) = h(F(t)) W(t) • Wage (W) – Wage is increasing in human capital – W(t) = g(HK(t)) Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
Model—basic structure • Take fertility variations as given, trace out consequences for HK, wage, consumption. • 3 generations: children, workers, retirees; usual accounting identities. • No saving or physical capital. • HK drives wage growth; wage growth drives HK growth. (Lee and Mason 2008) Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
Boom (demoraphic dividend) Fertility bust, but consumption remains high Fertility recovers: modest effect on C/EA Bottom line: Low fertility leads to higher consumption. Human capital investment has moderated the impact of fertility swings on standards of living. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
During first dividend phase, consumption does not rise as much as support ratio. The difference is invested in HK. That is why ih later periods, consumption is proportionately higher than the support ratio. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; from Lee and Mason, 2008, NTA
IX. Conclusions for changes over the transition • Support ratios change over demographic transition; ending where started, roughly. – Importance in long view may be exaggerated. – In shorter view, pop aging is a painful payback phase. • Bigger effect is on capital intensity – Raises productivity per worker – Raises wealth and asset income • However, increased demand for wealth can be met either by increased asset holdings or through increased transfer wealth. • Major role for policy and institutions at every point; nothing inevitable. • Increased human capital results from low fertility—so closely related to aging: same cause for both. – Raises productivity. Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
END Ronald Lee Oct 2008; based on NTA for each country
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