Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Demographics and Economic Crisis

The anti-population mainstream media has been doing some hand-wringing over the arrival of the 7th billion person on this planet, and warnings about environmental and food crisis have been flowing non-stop.  Not unexpectedly, intelligence service Stratfor has provided a piece on this matter via its Geopolitical Diary service. What was different was that Stratfor argues that we are on the verge of a population decline with the advanced countries leading the way via their aging populations.

One part of the article that resonated with me was the following:


Demography drove economies to this condition in the 1990s, when credit (and thus growth) increased. In the 2000s, mature workers produced a good deal of excess capital. The 2010s find the global economy correcting itself after 20 years of excess-capital-driven growth — at the same time as mature workers are retiring and leaving their capital-supplying role.
A darker period is likely to dawn by the 2020s. Most of those high-wage earners will have retired — they will no longer supply capital and instead will depend on the state to issue their pensions. The cost of capital will invert strongly. The generation born between 1964 and 1979 — characterized by its low numbers — will be responsible for supplying capital. They will not only have to fund the younger generations but will also have to support the pensions and geriatric-support programs created by their predecessors. Since the developing world’s aging process lags about 30 years behind that of the developed world, this same generation will act as the primary capital suppliers to the entire world. 
The developing world started to age too late. Its countries will lack enough mature workers to generate the capital needed to replace that which can no longer be imported from the developed world. The developing world will experience the financial challenges of the developed world, without having built up the infrastructure and industrial base the developed world has had for three generations. Such capital scarcity threatens to halt growth across the poorer parts of the planet. It will also make for strange bedfellows: the only hope the developed world’s ’64-’79 generation will have to meet their bills is to import more taxpayers. Perhaps the most unexpected outcome of population patterns is that the developed world will have a massive interest in attracting immigrants
The significance of the aforementioned for me is that while I disagree with the government's immigration policies as they now stand, one can see that if Stratfor's analysis is correct, Singapore is already quite ahead of the curve in terms of preparing for the darker future postulated.

As some commentators have noted, we could well be in the midst of a Kondratieff winter.  If that were the case, this dynamic of aging population in the developed world will have very serious repercussions for the global economy.  I suspect that those Singaporeans currently paying $100K COV for bigger HDB flats and $75K for a COE will not have too happy a future.

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