Population Aging and Economic Growth

Between 2000 and 2050, the share of the population aged 60 and over is projected to increase in every country in the world. Although labor force participation rates are projected to decline from 2000 to 2040 in most countries, due mainly to changes...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bloom, David E., Canning, David, Fink, Günther
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
SEX
WAR
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/875321468163461857/Population-aging-and-economic-growth
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28027
id okr-10986-28027
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 ACCOUNTING
ADULT MORTALITY
ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES
AGE DISTRIBUTION
AGE GROUPS
AGED
AGING
AGING POPULATIONS
ALCOHOL ABUSE
ANXIETY
BABIES
BABY
BABY BOOM
BEHAVIOR CHANGE
BIRTH RATE
CAPITAL MARKETS
CENSUS
CENSUS DATA
CHANGES IN FERTILITY
CHILD MORTALITY
CHILDREN PER WOMAN
CHRONIC DISEASE
CLIMATE CHANGE
CONSEQUENCES OF POPULATION
CRIME
DEATH RATE
DEATH RATES
DECLINES IN FERTILITY
DEMAND FOR SERVICES
DEMOCRACY
DEMOGRAPHERS
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE
DEMOGRAPHIC IMBALANCES
DEMOGRAPHIC PROJECTIONS
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
DEMOGRAPHICS
DEPENDENCY BURDEN
DEPENDENCY RATIOS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DIET
DISABILITY
DISCRIMINATION
DISTRIBUTIONS OF POPULATION
DRIVERS
EARLY RETIREMENT
ECONOMIC BENEFITS
ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF POPULATION
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS
ECONOMIC NEEDS
ECONOMIC POLICY
ECONOMICS
EFFECTS OF POPULATION
EFFICIENCY OF LABOR
ELDERLY
ELDERLY PEOPLE
ELDERLY POPULATION
EMPLOYMENT
EPIDEMIC
FAMILIES
FAMILY STRUCTURES
FEMALE LABOR
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
FERTILITY BEHAVIOR
FERTILITY DECLINES
FERTILITY RATE
FERTILITY RATES
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL NEEDS
FISCAL POLICIES
FISCAL POLICY
FUTURE POPULATION
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM
GLOBAL HEALTH
GLOBAL POPULATION
GREENHOUSE GASES
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CARE COSTS
HEALTH CARE FINANCE
HEALTH ECONOMICS
HEALTH IMPACT
HEALTH IMPACTS
HEALTH STATUS
HEALTHY LIFE
HIGH FERTILITY
HIGH POPULATION GROWTH
HIV/AIDS
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
HOUSEHOLD LEVEL
HUMAN CAPITAL
ILL-HEALTH
ILLNESS
IMMIGRATION
IMPACT OF POPULATION
IMPACTS OF POPULATION
IMPORTANT POLICY
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
INFANT
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
INTERNATIONAL LABOR ORGANIZATION
INTERNATIONAL MIGRANTS
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
ISOLATION
JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
LABOR FORCE
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
LABOR STATISTICS
LABOR SUPPLY
LAWS
LEGAL STATUS
LEISURE TIME
LEVEL OF DEVELOPMENT
LIFE CYCLE
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIFESTYLES
LIVING STANDARDS
LONGER LIFE
LOW FERTILITY
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
LOWER FERTILITY
MALES
MEDICAL RESEARCH
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES
MIGRATION FLOWS
MORBIDITY
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATES
NATURAL DEATH
NATURAL RESOURCES
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
NUTRITION
OBESITY
OLD AGE
OLD-AGE
OLDER MEN
OLDER PEOPLE
OLDER WORKERS
PENSIONS
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
POLICY MAKERS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POOR HEALTH
POPULATION AGE STRUCTURE
POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT
POPULATION BOMB
POPULATION BY AGE
POPULATION CHANGE
POPULATION DATA
POPULATION DEBATE
POPULATION DIVISION
POPULATION ESTIMATES
POPULATION FORECASTS
POPULATION GROWTH RATE
POPULATION HEALTH
POPULATION MATTERS
POPULATION PROJECTIONS
POPULATION SIZE
POPULATION STRUCTURE
POPULATION STUDIES
POPULATION THEORY
POPULATION TRENDS
PRACTITIONERS
PROBLEM OF POPULATION
PRODUCTIVITY
PROGRESS
PUBLIC HEALTH
PURCHASING POWER
PURCHASING POWER PARITY
RAPID POPULATION GROWTH
REAL INCOME
RESPECT
RETIREMENT
SEX
SEX DISTRIBUTION
SMOKING
SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES
SOCIAL SECURITY
TOTAL FERTILITY RATE
VIRGIN
WAGES
WAR
WASTE
WORKERS
WORKFORCE
WORKING HOURS
WORKING-AGE POPULATION
WORLD POPULATION
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG POPULATIONS
spellingShingle ACCOUNTING
ADULT MORTALITY
ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES
AGE DISTRIBUTION
AGE GROUPS
AGED
AGING
AGING POPULATIONS
ALCOHOL ABUSE
ANXIETY
BABIES
BABY
BABY BOOM
BEHAVIOR CHANGE
BIRTH RATE
CAPITAL MARKETS
CENSUS
CENSUS DATA
CHANGES IN FERTILITY
CHILD MORTALITY
CHILDREN PER WOMAN
CHRONIC DISEASE
CLIMATE CHANGE
CONSEQUENCES OF POPULATION
CRIME
DEATH RATE
DEATH RATES
DECLINES IN FERTILITY
DEMAND FOR SERVICES
DEMOCRACY
DEMOGRAPHERS
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE
DEMOGRAPHIC IMBALANCES
DEMOGRAPHIC PROJECTIONS
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
DEMOGRAPHICS
DEPENDENCY BURDEN
DEPENDENCY RATIOS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DIET
DISABILITY
DISCRIMINATION
DISTRIBUTIONS OF POPULATION
DRIVERS
EARLY RETIREMENT
ECONOMIC BENEFITS
ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF POPULATION
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS
ECONOMIC NEEDS
ECONOMIC POLICY
ECONOMICS
EFFECTS OF POPULATION
EFFICIENCY OF LABOR
ELDERLY
ELDERLY PEOPLE
ELDERLY POPULATION
EMPLOYMENT
EPIDEMIC
FAMILIES
FAMILY STRUCTURES
FEMALE LABOR
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
FERTILITY BEHAVIOR
FERTILITY DECLINES
FERTILITY RATE
FERTILITY RATES
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL NEEDS
FISCAL POLICIES
FISCAL POLICY
FUTURE POPULATION
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM
GLOBAL HEALTH
GLOBAL POPULATION
GREENHOUSE GASES
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CARE COSTS
HEALTH CARE FINANCE
HEALTH ECONOMICS
HEALTH IMPACT
HEALTH IMPACTS
HEALTH STATUS
HEALTHY LIFE
HIGH FERTILITY
HIGH POPULATION GROWTH
HIV/AIDS
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
HOUSEHOLD LEVEL
HUMAN CAPITAL
ILL-HEALTH
ILLNESS
IMMIGRATION
IMPACT OF POPULATION
IMPACTS OF POPULATION
IMPORTANT POLICY
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
INFANT
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
INTERNATIONAL LABOR ORGANIZATION
INTERNATIONAL MIGRANTS
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
ISOLATION
JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
LABOR FORCE
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
LABOR STATISTICS
LABOR SUPPLY
LAWS
LEGAL STATUS
LEISURE TIME
LEVEL OF DEVELOPMENT
LIFE CYCLE
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIFESTYLES
LIVING STANDARDS
LONGER LIFE
LOW FERTILITY
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
LOWER FERTILITY
MALES
MEDICAL RESEARCH
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES
MIGRATION FLOWS
MORBIDITY
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATES
NATURAL DEATH
NATURAL RESOURCES
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
NUTRITION
OBESITY
OLD AGE
OLD-AGE
OLDER MEN
OLDER PEOPLE
OLDER WORKERS
PENSIONS
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
POLICY MAKERS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POOR HEALTH
POPULATION AGE STRUCTURE
POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT
POPULATION BOMB
POPULATION BY AGE
POPULATION CHANGE
POPULATION DATA
POPULATION DEBATE
POPULATION DIVISION
POPULATION ESTIMATES
POPULATION FORECASTS
POPULATION GROWTH RATE
POPULATION HEALTH
POPULATION MATTERS
POPULATION PROJECTIONS
POPULATION SIZE
POPULATION STRUCTURE
POPULATION STUDIES
POPULATION THEORY
POPULATION TRENDS
PRACTITIONERS
PROBLEM OF POPULATION
PRODUCTIVITY
PROGRESS
PUBLIC HEALTH
PURCHASING POWER
PURCHASING POWER PARITY
RAPID POPULATION GROWTH
REAL INCOME
RESPECT
RETIREMENT
SEX
SEX DISTRIBUTION
SMOKING
SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES
SOCIAL SECURITY
TOTAL FERTILITY RATE
VIRGIN
WAGES
WAR
WASTE
WORKERS
WORKFORCE
WORKING HOURS
WORKING-AGE POPULATION
WORLD POPULATION
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG POPULATIONS
Bloom, David E.
Canning, David
Fink, Günther
Population Aging and Economic Growth
relation Commission on Growth and Development Working Paper;No. 32
description Between 2000 and 2050, the share of the population aged 60 and over is projected to increase in every country in the world. Although labor force participation rates are projected to decline from 2000 to 2040 in most countries, due mainly to changes in their age distributions, labor force- to-population ratios will actually increase in most countries. This is because low fertility will cause lower youth dependency that is more than enough to offset the skewing of adults toward the older ages at which labor force participation is lower. The increase in labor-force-to-population ratios will be further magnified by increases in age-specific rates of female labor force participation associated with fertility declines. These factors suggest that economic growth will continue apace, notwithstanding the phenomenon of population aging. For the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries, the declines projected to occur in both labor force participation and labor-force-to-population ratios suggest modest declines in the pace of economic growth. But even these effects can be mitigated by behavioral responses to population aging-in the form of higher savings for retirement, greater labor force participation, and increased immigration from labor-surplus to labor-deficit countries. Countries that can facilitate such changes may be able to limit the adverse consequences of population aging. When seen through the lens of several mitigating considerations, there is reason to think that population aging in developed countries may have less effect than some have predicted. In addition, policy responses related to retirement incentives, pension funding methods, investments in health care of the elderly, and immigration can further ameliorate the effect of population aging on economic growth.
format Working Paper
author Bloom, David E.
Canning, David
Fink, Günther
author_facet Bloom, David E.
Canning, David
Fink, Günther
author_sort Bloom, David E.
title Population Aging and Economic Growth
title_short Population Aging and Economic Growth
title_full Population Aging and Economic Growth
title_fullStr Population Aging and Economic Growth
title_full_unstemmed Population Aging and Economic Growth
title_sort population aging and economic growth
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/875321468163461857/Population-aging-and-economic-growth
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28027
_version_ 1764465986196471808
spelling okr-10986-280272021-04-23T14:04:46Z Population Aging and Economic Growth Bloom, David E. Canning, David Fink, Günther ACCOUNTING ADULT MORTALITY ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES AGE DISTRIBUTION AGE GROUPS AGED AGING AGING POPULATIONS ALCOHOL ABUSE ANXIETY BABIES BABY BABY BOOM BEHAVIOR CHANGE BIRTH RATE CAPITAL MARKETS CENSUS CENSUS DATA CHANGES IN FERTILITY CHILD MORTALITY CHILDREN PER WOMAN CHRONIC DISEASE CLIMATE CHANGE CONSEQUENCES OF POPULATION CRIME DEATH RATE DEATH RATES DECLINES IN FERTILITY DEMAND FOR SERVICES DEMOCRACY DEMOGRAPHERS DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE DEMOGRAPHIC IMBALANCES DEMOGRAPHIC PROJECTIONS DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION DEMOGRAPHICS DEPENDENCY BURDEN DEPENDENCY RATIOS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DIET DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION DISTRIBUTIONS OF POPULATION DRIVERS EARLY RETIREMENT ECONOMIC BENEFITS ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF POPULATION ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS ECONOMIC NEEDS ECONOMIC POLICY ECONOMICS EFFECTS OF POPULATION EFFICIENCY OF LABOR ELDERLY ELDERLY PEOPLE ELDERLY POPULATION EMPLOYMENT EPIDEMIC FAMILIES FAMILY STRUCTURES FEMALE LABOR FEMALE LABOR FORCE FERTILITY BEHAVIOR FERTILITY DECLINES FERTILITY RATE FERTILITY RATES FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL NEEDS FISCAL POLICIES FISCAL POLICY FUTURE POPULATION GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM GLOBAL HEALTH GLOBAL POPULATION GREENHOUSE GASES HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE COSTS HEALTH CARE FINANCE HEALTH ECONOMICS HEALTH IMPACT HEALTH IMPACTS HEALTH STATUS HEALTHY LIFE HIGH FERTILITY HIGH POPULATION GROWTH HIV/AIDS HOUSEHOLD INCOME HOUSEHOLD LEVEL HUMAN CAPITAL ILL-HEALTH ILLNESS IMMIGRATION IMPACT OF POPULATION IMPACTS OF POPULATION IMPORTANT POLICY INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION INFANT INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY INTERNATIONAL LABOR ORGANIZATION INTERNATIONAL MIGRANTS INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION INTERNATIONAL TRADE ISOLATION JOURNAL OF MEDICINE LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION LABOR STATISTICS LABOR SUPPLY LAWS LEGAL STATUS LEISURE TIME LEVEL OF DEVELOPMENT LIFE CYCLE LIFE EXPECTANCY LIFESTYLES LIVING STANDARDS LONGER LIFE LOW FERTILITY LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES LOWER FERTILITY MALES MEDICAL RESEARCH MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES MIGRATION FLOWS MORBIDITY MORTALITY MORTALITY RATES NATURAL DEATH NATURAL RESOURCES NUMBER OF PEOPLE NUTRITION OBESITY OLD AGE OLD-AGE OLDER MEN OLDER PEOPLE OLDER WORKERS PENSIONS POLICY IMPLICATIONS POLICY MAKERS POLITICAL ECONOMY POOR HEALTH POPULATION AGE STRUCTURE POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT POPULATION BOMB POPULATION BY AGE POPULATION CHANGE POPULATION DATA POPULATION DEBATE POPULATION DIVISION POPULATION ESTIMATES POPULATION FORECASTS POPULATION GROWTH RATE POPULATION HEALTH POPULATION MATTERS POPULATION PROJECTIONS POPULATION SIZE POPULATION STRUCTURE POPULATION STUDIES POPULATION THEORY POPULATION TRENDS PRACTITIONERS PROBLEM OF POPULATION PRODUCTIVITY PROGRESS PUBLIC HEALTH PURCHASING POWER PURCHASING POWER PARITY RAPID POPULATION GROWTH REAL INCOME RESPECT RETIREMENT SEX SEX DISTRIBUTION SMOKING SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES SOCIAL SECURITY TOTAL FERTILITY RATE VIRGIN WAGES WAR WASTE WORKERS WORKFORCE WORKING HOURS WORKING-AGE POPULATION WORLD POPULATION YOUNG PEOPLE YOUNG POPULATIONS Between 2000 and 2050, the share of the population aged 60 and over is projected to increase in every country in the world. Although labor force participation rates are projected to decline from 2000 to 2040 in most countries, due mainly to changes in their age distributions, labor force- to-population ratios will actually increase in most countries. This is because low fertility will cause lower youth dependency that is more than enough to offset the skewing of adults toward the older ages at which labor force participation is lower. The increase in labor-force-to-population ratios will be further magnified by increases in age-specific rates of female labor force participation associated with fertility declines. These factors suggest that economic growth will continue apace, notwithstanding the phenomenon of population aging. For the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries, the declines projected to occur in both labor force participation and labor-force-to-population ratios suggest modest declines in the pace of economic growth. But even these effects can be mitigated by behavioral responses to population aging-in the form of higher savings for retirement, greater labor force participation, and increased immigration from labor-surplus to labor-deficit countries. Countries that can facilitate such changes may be able to limit the adverse consequences of population aging. When seen through the lens of several mitigating considerations, there is reason to think that population aging in developed countries may have less effect than some have predicted. In addition, policy responses related to retirement incentives, pension funding methods, investments in health care of the elderly, and immigration can further ameliorate the effect of population aging on economic growth. 2017-08-28T19:37:28Z 2017-08-28T19:37:28Z 2008 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/875321468163461857/Population-aging-and-economic-growth http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28027 English en_US Commission on Growth and Development Working Paper;No. 32 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research