Fiscal Policy Issues in the Aging Societies

Aging may be one of the most far-reaching processes defining the economic, fiscal, and social changes societies are likely to experience over the next 40 years. The demographic consequences of aging will have a dramatic impact on labor markets, eco...

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Main Authors: Bogetic, Zeljko, Onder, Harun, Onal, Anil, Skrok, Emilia, Schwartz, Anita, Winkler, Hernan
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: 2015
Subjects:
TAX
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/03/24200847/fiscal-policy-issues-aging-societies
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21782
id okr-10986-21782
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic AGING
FISCAL POLICY
AGE-RELATED SPENDING
EUROPE
CENTRAL ASIA AGING
FISCAL POLICY
AGE-RELATED SPENDING
EUROPE
CENTRAL ASIA
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
ACCOUNTING
ACCUMULATION OF DEBT
ADULT MORTALITY
ADVANCED ECONOMIES
AGE DISTRIBUTION
AGED
AGING COUNTRIES
BALANCE SHEETS
BENEFICIARIES
BENEFICIARY
BUDGET CONSTRAINT
BUDGET DEFICITS
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
CAPITAL STOCK
CAREGIVERS
CHILD MORTALITY
CLOSED ECONOMY
CURRENCY
CURRENCY COMPOSITION
CURRENT POPULATION
DEBT BURDEN
DEBT BURDENS
DEBT CRISIS
DEBT ISSUANCE
DEBT MANAGEMENT
DEBT RATIO
DEBT STOCK
DEFICITS
DEMOGRAPHIC
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES
DEMOGRAPHIC CONSEQUENCES
DEMOGRAPHIC IMPACT
DEMOGRAPHIC PROJECTIONS
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
DEPENDENCY RATIO
DEPENDENCY RATIOS
DEVELOPMENT INVESTMENTS
DISABILITY
DIVIDEND
DURABLE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
ELDERLY
ELDERLY PEOPLE
EXCISE TAXES
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
FAMILIES
FERTILITY
FERTILITY RATES
FEWER CHILDREN
FINANCES
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FISCAL CONSOLIDATION
FISCAL CONSOLIDATIONS
FISCAL DEFICIT
FISCAL MANAGEMENT
FISCAL REFORMS
FUTURE GENERATIONS
GENERATIONAL ACCOUNTING
GENERATIONAL ACCOUNTS
GOVERNMENT BONDS
GOVERNMENT BUDGETS
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
HEALTH REFORM
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH SPENDING
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HIGH POPULATION GROWTH
HOLDING
HOSPITAL
IMMIGRATION
IMPLICIT DEBT
INCENTIVE STRUCTURE
INCOME GROWTH
INCOME LEVEL
INCOME LEVELS
INCOME TAXES
INDEBTED COUNTRIES
INDEBTEDNESS
INEQUITIES
INFLATION
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
INITIAL DEBT
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL EFFORTS
INVESTING
LABOR FORCE
LABOR FORCES
LABOR MARKETS
LIABILITY
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIFELONG LEARNING
LONG-TERM CARE
LONG-TERM DEBT
LOW FERTILITY
LOWER FERTILITY
MARKET REGULATION
MIGRATION
MIGRATION FLOW
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATE
NUMBER OF CHILDREN
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
NURSES
OIL RESOURCES
OLD AGE
OLD-AGE
OLD-AGE PENSION
OLD-AGE PENSIONS
OPEN ECONOMY
OUTPUT
PARTICULAR COUNTRY
PENSION
PENSION CONTRIBUTION
PENSION CONTRIBUTIONS
PENSION FUND
PENSION SYSTEM
PENSIONS
PERSONAL INCOME
PHYSICIANS
POLICY CHANGE
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POPULATION DECLINE
POPULATION DYNAMICS
POPULATION GROWTH RATES
POPULATION PROJECTIONS
POPULATION SIZE
POPULATION STRUCTURE
PORTFOLIOS
PRIVATE SAVINGS
PROGRESS
PUBLIC
PUBLIC BUDGET
PUBLIC DEBT
PUBLIC EDUCATION
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
PUBLIC FINANCE
PUBLIC FINANCES
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC PENSION
PUBLIC REVENUES
PUBLIC SPENDING
PURCHASING POWER
QUALITY OF LIFE
QUALITY OF SERVICES
RATE OF POPULATION GROWTH
RATE OF RETURN
RATES OF GROWTH
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS
REPLACEMENT RATES
RESPECT
RETIREMENT AGE
RETIREMENT AGES
RETURNS
SAVINGS
SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN
SECONDARY EDUCATION
SHORT TERM DEBT
SOCIAL CHANGES
SOCIAL SECURITY
SOCIAL SERVICES
SOCIAL SYSTEMS
STATE GUARANTEES
STOCK EXCHANGE
STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS
TAX
TAX EXEMPTIONS
TAX POLICY
TAX REVENUES
TAX SYSTEM
TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGES
TERTIARY EDUCATION
TRANSITION COUNTRIES
TREATY
UNEMPLOYMENT
WAGE GROWTH
WORK FORCE
WORKERS
WORKING POPULATION
WORKING-AGE POPULATION
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
WORLD POPULATION
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG POPULATIONS
spellingShingle AGING
FISCAL POLICY
AGE-RELATED SPENDING
EUROPE
CENTRAL ASIA AGING
FISCAL POLICY
AGE-RELATED SPENDING
EUROPE
CENTRAL ASIA
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
ACCOUNTING
ACCUMULATION OF DEBT
ADULT MORTALITY
ADVANCED ECONOMIES
AGE DISTRIBUTION
AGED
AGING COUNTRIES
BALANCE SHEETS
BENEFICIARIES
BENEFICIARY
BUDGET CONSTRAINT
BUDGET DEFICITS
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
CAPITAL STOCK
CAREGIVERS
CHILD MORTALITY
CLOSED ECONOMY
CURRENCY
CURRENCY COMPOSITION
CURRENT POPULATION
DEBT BURDEN
DEBT BURDENS
DEBT CRISIS
DEBT ISSUANCE
DEBT MANAGEMENT
DEBT RATIO
DEBT STOCK
DEFICITS
DEMOGRAPHIC
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES
DEMOGRAPHIC CONSEQUENCES
DEMOGRAPHIC IMPACT
DEMOGRAPHIC PROJECTIONS
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
DEPENDENCY RATIO
DEPENDENCY RATIOS
DEVELOPMENT INVESTMENTS
DISABILITY
DIVIDEND
DURABLE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
ELDERLY
ELDERLY PEOPLE
EXCISE TAXES
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
FAMILIES
FERTILITY
FERTILITY RATES
FEWER CHILDREN
FINANCES
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FISCAL CONSOLIDATION
FISCAL CONSOLIDATIONS
FISCAL DEFICIT
FISCAL MANAGEMENT
FISCAL REFORMS
FUTURE GENERATIONS
GENERATIONAL ACCOUNTING
GENERATIONAL ACCOUNTS
GOVERNMENT BONDS
GOVERNMENT BUDGETS
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
HEALTH REFORM
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH SPENDING
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HIGH POPULATION GROWTH
HOLDING
HOSPITAL
IMMIGRATION
IMPLICIT DEBT
INCENTIVE STRUCTURE
INCOME GROWTH
INCOME LEVEL
INCOME LEVELS
INCOME TAXES
INDEBTED COUNTRIES
INDEBTEDNESS
INEQUITIES
INFLATION
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
INITIAL DEBT
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL EFFORTS
INVESTING
LABOR FORCE
LABOR FORCES
LABOR MARKETS
LIABILITY
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIFELONG LEARNING
LONG-TERM CARE
LONG-TERM DEBT
LOW FERTILITY
LOWER FERTILITY
MARKET REGULATION
MIGRATION
MIGRATION FLOW
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATE
NUMBER OF CHILDREN
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
NURSES
OIL RESOURCES
OLD AGE
OLD-AGE
OLD-AGE PENSION
OLD-AGE PENSIONS
OPEN ECONOMY
OUTPUT
PARTICULAR COUNTRY
PENSION
PENSION CONTRIBUTION
PENSION CONTRIBUTIONS
PENSION FUND
PENSION SYSTEM
PENSIONS
PERSONAL INCOME
PHYSICIANS
POLICY CHANGE
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POPULATION DECLINE
POPULATION DYNAMICS
POPULATION GROWTH RATES
POPULATION PROJECTIONS
POPULATION SIZE
POPULATION STRUCTURE
PORTFOLIOS
PRIVATE SAVINGS
PROGRESS
PUBLIC
PUBLIC BUDGET
PUBLIC DEBT
PUBLIC EDUCATION
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
PUBLIC FINANCE
PUBLIC FINANCES
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC PENSION
PUBLIC REVENUES
PUBLIC SPENDING
PURCHASING POWER
QUALITY OF LIFE
QUALITY OF SERVICES
RATE OF POPULATION GROWTH
RATE OF RETURN
RATES OF GROWTH
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS
REPLACEMENT RATES
RESPECT
RETIREMENT AGE
RETIREMENT AGES
RETURNS
SAVINGS
SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN
SECONDARY EDUCATION
SHORT TERM DEBT
SOCIAL CHANGES
SOCIAL SECURITY
SOCIAL SERVICES
SOCIAL SYSTEMS
STATE GUARANTEES
STOCK EXCHANGE
STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS
TAX
TAX EXEMPTIONS
TAX POLICY
TAX REVENUES
TAX SYSTEM
TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGES
TERTIARY EDUCATION
TRANSITION COUNTRIES
TREATY
UNEMPLOYMENT
WAGE GROWTH
WORK FORCE
WORKERS
WORKING POPULATION
WORKING-AGE POPULATION
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
WORLD POPULATION
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG POPULATIONS
Bogetic, Zeljko
Onder, Harun
Onal, Anil
Skrok, Emilia
Schwartz, Anita
Winkler, Hernan
Fiscal Policy Issues in the Aging Societies
relation Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Discussion Paper;no. 1
description Aging may be one of the most far-reaching processes defining the economic, fiscal, and social changes societies are likely to experience over the next 40 years. The demographic consequences of aging will have a dramatic impact on labor markets, economic growth, social structures--and government budgets. These issues have gained urgency after the second largest global recession in the past 100 years. Based on a broad comparative analysis of countries that include the EU and non-EU European and Central Asian countries, as well as several case studies and model simulations, the paper seeks to provide broad answers--tailored in part to distinct groups of countries according to their aging-fiscal profiles--to major questions facing governments budgets in aging societies: What are the fiscal-aging profiles of Western European, emerging European, and Central Asian countries? In other words, how good or bad is their fiscal situation--"initial conditions"--in view of their emerging aging-related problems? What kind of public spending pressures are likely to emerge in the coming decades, and what will be their relative importance? How do countries compare in terms of the possible impacts of aging on growth and long-term debt sustainability? What can be learned from in-depth and comparative case studies of aging, fiscal sustainability, and fiscal reform? Are there good-practice examples--countries doing things right at the right time--that may offer lessons for the others? And, perhaps most important, given the need for long-term fiscal consolidation for many countries, what kind of revenue and expenditure policy agendas are likely to emerge to mitigate the effects of aging? A key policy conclusion is that countries should aim for early rather than delayed reforms dealing with long-term aging pressures. The urgency is accentuated by the debt situations and/or adverse debt and demographic dynamics in almost all countries but also by the evolving voter preferences. As societies age and voting preferences increasingly reflect the political will of the older population, it will become more difficult to enact the necessary reforms ensuring social and fiscal sustainability.
format Working Paper
author Bogetic, Zeljko
Onder, Harun
Onal, Anil
Skrok, Emilia
Schwartz, Anita
Winkler, Hernan
author_facet Bogetic, Zeljko
Onder, Harun
Onal, Anil
Skrok, Emilia
Schwartz, Anita
Winkler, Hernan
author_sort Bogetic, Zeljko
title Fiscal Policy Issues in the Aging Societies
title_short Fiscal Policy Issues in the Aging Societies
title_full Fiscal Policy Issues in the Aging Societies
title_fullStr Fiscal Policy Issues in the Aging Societies
title_full_unstemmed Fiscal Policy Issues in the Aging Societies
title_sort fiscal policy issues in the aging societies
publishDate 2015
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/03/24200847/fiscal-policy-issues-aging-societies
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21782
_version_ 1764449243310850048
spelling okr-10986-217822021-06-14T10:21:30Z Fiscal Policy Issues in the Aging Societies Bogetic, Zeljko Onder, Harun Onal, Anil Skrok, Emilia Schwartz, Anita Winkler, Hernan AGING FISCAL POLICY AGE-RELATED SPENDING EUROPE CENTRAL ASIA AGING FISCAL POLICY AGE-RELATED SPENDING EUROPE CENTRAL ASIA ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES ACCOUNTING ACCUMULATION OF DEBT ADULT MORTALITY ADVANCED ECONOMIES AGE DISTRIBUTION AGED AGING COUNTRIES BALANCE SHEETS BENEFICIARIES BENEFICIARY BUDGET CONSTRAINT BUDGET DEFICITS CAPITAL ACCUMULATION CAPITAL STOCK CAREGIVERS CHILD MORTALITY CLOSED ECONOMY CURRENCY CURRENCY COMPOSITION CURRENT POPULATION DEBT BURDEN DEBT BURDENS DEBT CRISIS DEBT ISSUANCE DEBT MANAGEMENT DEBT RATIO DEBT STOCK DEFICITS DEMOGRAPHIC DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES DEMOGRAPHIC CONSEQUENCES DEMOGRAPHIC IMPACT DEMOGRAPHIC PROJECTIONS DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION DEPENDENCY RATIO DEPENDENCY RATIOS DEVELOPMENT INVESTMENTS DISABILITY DIVIDEND DURABLE ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ELDERLY ELDERLY PEOPLE EXCISE TAXES EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES FACTORS OF PRODUCTION FAMILIES FERTILITY FERTILITY RATES FEWER CHILDREN FINANCES FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL SECTOR FISCAL CONSOLIDATION FISCAL CONSOLIDATIONS FISCAL DEFICIT FISCAL MANAGEMENT FISCAL REFORMS FUTURE GENERATIONS GENERATIONAL ACCOUNTING GENERATIONAL ACCOUNTS GOVERNMENT BONDS GOVERNMENT BUDGETS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES GOVERNMENT SPENDING GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM HEALTH REFORM HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SPENDING HEALTH SYSTEMS HIGH POPULATION GROWTH HOLDING HOSPITAL IMMIGRATION IMPLICIT DEBT INCENTIVE STRUCTURE INCOME GROWTH INCOME LEVEL INCOME LEVELS INCOME TAXES INDEBTED COUNTRIES INDEBTEDNESS INEQUITIES INFLATION INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS INITIAL DEBT INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL EFFORTS INVESTING LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCES LABOR MARKETS LIABILITY LIFE EXPECTANCY LIFELONG LEARNING LONG-TERM CARE LONG-TERM DEBT LOW FERTILITY LOWER FERTILITY MARKET REGULATION MIGRATION MIGRATION FLOW MORTALITY MORTALITY RATE NUMBER OF CHILDREN NUMBER OF PEOPLE NURSES OIL RESOURCES OLD AGE OLD-AGE OLD-AGE PENSION OLD-AGE PENSIONS OPEN ECONOMY OUTPUT PARTICULAR COUNTRY PENSION PENSION CONTRIBUTION PENSION CONTRIBUTIONS PENSION FUND PENSION SYSTEM PENSIONS PERSONAL INCOME PHYSICIANS POLICY CHANGE POLITICAL ECONOMY POPULATION DECLINE POPULATION DYNAMICS POPULATION GROWTH RATES POPULATION PROJECTIONS POPULATION SIZE POPULATION STRUCTURE PORTFOLIOS PRIVATE SAVINGS PROGRESS PUBLIC PUBLIC BUDGET PUBLIC DEBT PUBLIC EDUCATION PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC FINANCES PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC PENSION PUBLIC REVENUES PUBLIC SPENDING PURCHASING POWER QUALITY OF LIFE QUALITY OF SERVICES RATE OF POPULATION GROWTH RATE OF RETURN RATES OF GROWTH REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS REPLACEMENT RATES RESPECT RETIREMENT AGE RETIREMENT AGES RETURNS SAVINGS SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN SECONDARY EDUCATION SHORT TERM DEBT SOCIAL CHANGES SOCIAL SECURITY SOCIAL SERVICES SOCIAL SYSTEMS STATE GUARANTEES STOCK EXCHANGE STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS TAX TAX EXEMPTIONS TAX POLICY TAX REVENUES TAX SYSTEM TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGES TERTIARY EDUCATION TRANSITION COUNTRIES TREATY UNEMPLOYMENT WAGE GROWTH WORK FORCE WORKERS WORKING POPULATION WORKING-AGE POPULATION WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS WORLD POPULATION YOUNG PEOPLE YOUNG POPULATIONS Aging may be one of the most far-reaching processes defining the economic, fiscal, and social changes societies are likely to experience over the next 40 years. The demographic consequences of aging will have a dramatic impact on labor markets, economic growth, social structures--and government budgets. These issues have gained urgency after the second largest global recession in the past 100 years. Based on a broad comparative analysis of countries that include the EU and non-EU European and Central Asian countries, as well as several case studies and model simulations, the paper seeks to provide broad answers--tailored in part to distinct groups of countries according to their aging-fiscal profiles--to major questions facing governments budgets in aging societies: What are the fiscal-aging profiles of Western European, emerging European, and Central Asian countries? In other words, how good or bad is their fiscal situation--"initial conditions"--in view of their emerging aging-related problems? What kind of public spending pressures are likely to emerge in the coming decades, and what will be their relative importance? How do countries compare in terms of the possible impacts of aging on growth and long-term debt sustainability? What can be learned from in-depth and comparative case studies of aging, fiscal sustainability, and fiscal reform? Are there good-practice examples--countries doing things right at the right time--that may offer lessons for the others? And, perhaps most important, given the need for long-term fiscal consolidation for many countries, what kind of revenue and expenditure policy agendas are likely to emerge to mitigate the effects of aging? A key policy conclusion is that countries should aim for early rather than delayed reforms dealing with long-term aging pressures. The urgency is accentuated by the debt situations and/or adverse debt and demographic dynamics in almost all countries but also by the evolving voter preferences. As societies age and voting preferences increasingly reflect the political will of the older population, it will become more difficult to enact the necessary reforms ensuring social and fiscal sustainability. 2015-04-24T20:53:07Z 2015-04-24T20:53:07Z 2015-03 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/03/24200847/fiscal-policy-issues-aging-societies http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21782 English en_US Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Discussion Paper;no. 1 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper