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    Macroeconomic implications ofdemographic developments

    in the euro area

    Angela Maddaloni, Alberto Musso, Philipp Rother,

    Thomas Westermann, Melanie Ward-Warmedinger

    13th Economic Conference, Dubrovnik, 28 June 2007

    Disclaimer: Any views expressed are only the authors own and do not

    necessarily reflect the views of the ECB or the Eurosystem

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    2

    The current situation

    From The Economist, 14 June 2007:

    Europe is fast becoming a barren, ageing, enfeebled place.

    Vast numbers of old people, [..] will be looked after, or

    neglected, by too few economically active adults, supplemented

    by restless crowds of migrants. The combination of low fertility,

    longer life and mass immigration will put intolerable pressure

    on public health, pensions and social services, leading

    (probably) to upheaval.

    Maybe this looks a bit gloomy, but

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    The current situation

    Available projections suggest that all Western countries face the

    prospect of population ageing

    The problem is even more pronounced in the euro area, although

    there are considerable differences across countries concerning

    the pace of ageing

    Important consequences for economic growth, labour markets,

    public finances and possibly financial markets

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    Overview

    Look at the impact of population ageing for:

    Economic growth

    Labour markets

    Public finances

    Financial markets

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    5

    Impact on growth - demographic projections

    Notwithstanding the high uncertainty surrounding population

    projections, working age population growth is projected to turnnegative after 2010

    -1.0

    -0.5

    0.0

    0.5

    1.0

    1.5

    2.0

    1950-55 1960-65 1970-75 1980-85 1990-95 2000-05 2010-15 2020-25 2030-35 2040-45

    euro area

    United States

    working age population growth

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    Impact on growth - demographic projections

    Compared to the US, euro area dependency ratio is growing muchfaster. After 2050 every third person will be older than 64

    0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    35

    40

    45

    50

    55

    60

    1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050

    euro area

    United States

    old age dependency ratio

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    Impact on growth demographic projections

    The net migration rate is expected to fall up to 2010 and thereafterto stabilise in the euro area

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    1995-00 2010-15 2025-30 2040-45

    United States

    euro area

    Net migration rate (1,000 population)

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    Impact on growth - backward

    In the euro area the contribution of demographic factors to growth

    decreased since 1980, reflecting increasing dependency ratio and adecline in labour productivity linked to ageing

    Euro area growth accounting

    -2

    -1

    0

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    67

    1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

    Working age population contributionLabour productivity contributionLabour utilisation contributionReal GDP growth

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    Impact on growth - backward

    Working age population growth contributed to real GDP growth

    in the US more than twice than in the euro area

    US Growth Accounting

    -2

    -1

    01

    2

    3

    4

    5

    67

    1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

    Working age population contributionLabour productivity contributionLabour utilisation contributionReal GDP growth

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    Impact on growth forward-scenario 1

    Assuming the labour productivity and labour utilisation evolve on

    average as in the past, there will be a negative impact on euro areagrowth

    Euro Area Growth Accounting

    -2

    -1

    0

    12

    3

    4

    5

    6

    7

    1965 1975 1985 1995 2005 2015 2025 2035 2045

    W orking age population contributionLabour productivity contributionLabour utilisation contributionReal GDP growth

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    Impact on growth forward-scenario 1

    Same scenario for the US

    US Growth Accounting

    -2

    -10

    1

    2

    3

    4

    56

    7

    1965 1975 1985 1995 2005 2015 2025 2035 2045

    Working age population contributionLabour productivity contr ibutionLabour utilisation contributionReal GDP growth

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    Impact on growth forward-scenario 2

    Assuming the labour productivity and labour utilisation grow in

    line with more optimistic assumptions, still there will be a negativeimpact on euro area growth

    -2

    -1

    0

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    67

    1965 1975 1985 1995 2005 2015 2025 2035 2045

    Working age population contributionLabour productivity contributionLabour utilisation contribution

    Real GDP growth

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    Overview

    Go through the impact on:

    Economic growth

    Labour markets

    Public finance

    Financial markets

    What are the options for reforms?

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    15

    Increase labour market participation, employment, productivity:there

    issignificant potential for female participation

    Labour markets: current situation

    Source: Eurostat

    Female participation rate

    0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    60

    70

    80

    Belgium

    German

    y

    Greece

    Spain

    Fran

    ce

    Irela

    ndIta

    ly

    Luxembo

    urg

    Netherla

    nds

    Austria

    Portu

    gal

    Finlan

    d

    Euro area average%

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    and for an increased participation of 55-64 years old

    Labour markets: current situation

    Source: Eurostat

    55-64 participation rate

    0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    60

    Belgi

    um

    Germ

    any

    Greece

    Spain

    France

    Irelan

    dIta

    ly

    Luxemb

    ourg

    Nethe

    rland

    s

    Austria

    Portu

    gal

    Finlan

    d

    %

    euro area average

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    Reform needs: labour markets

    Reduce disincentives to enter work

    interplay of taxes and benefits, early retirement schemes

    Encourage female labour market entry

    increase flexibility of working hours and provision of childcare services

    Encourage workers to remain at work later in life

    encourage policies of gradual exit from work, part-time work, increases in

    statutory retirement age

    Invest in quality of education, research and development, increase

    lifelong learning and tackle old age discrimination

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    Reform needs: labour markets

    The stabilisation of the old-age dependency ratios through

    migration alone is unlikely, due to the large number of migrants

    that would be required

    The EC states that using migration to fully compensate the impact

    of demographic ageing on the labor market is not a realistic

    option.

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    Overview

    Go through the impact on:

    Economic growth

    Labour markets

    Public finances

    Financial markets

    What are the options for reforms?

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    Impact on public finances

    The most important expenditure effects arise from public pension

    systems and health and long-term care

    The estimated fiscal impact of the increase in pension expenditures

    (from different sources) find a cumulative increase in pensionexpenditure of more than 5 pp of GDP for most euro area

    countries, with pressure rising rapidly after 2010 (for some

    countries [GR, PT] up to 10 pp).

    Looking at the outstanding stock of pension debt, it can be

    estimated an incremental implicit pension liability of close to 50%

    of GDP for the four largest euro area countries.

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    Impact on public finances

    Offsetting effects through unemployment and education

    expenditure are small and uncertain

    The EPC/European Commission projections may still turn out too

    low (e.g. favourable assumptions re. labour productivity)

    Recent projections by the OECD point to a much more gloomyscenario, especially concerning the cost increases of public

    spending on health and long-term care.

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    Reform options: public finances

    Major reform needs in public pension systems and health care and long-

    term care arrangements:Parametric reform of conventional pay-as-you-go pension systems

    necessary, but most likely insufficient

    Systemic pension reform: shift part of pension financing to funded

    arrangements and reduce exposure to demographic risks

    One option: notional defined contribution (PAYG) system combined with

    funded pillar

    Health care: raise efficiency through setting the right incentives for

    all participating parties (insurers, providers, patients)

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    Overview

    Go through the impact on:

    Economic growth

    Labour markets

    Public finance

    Financial markets

    What are the options for reforms?

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    Impact on financial markets

    Impact on prices and quantities due to changes in savings patterns and

    savings allocations of people belonging to different generations

    Changes in financial structures linked to ongoing pension reforms

    Workers are required to save more and contribute to funded pension

    arrangements

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    Possible changes in savings patterns are based on the idea that

    wealth follows a life-cycle pattern; moreover risk tolerancemay change with age

    Impact on financial markets

    0

    0

    0

    0

    1

    1

    1

    1

    1

    16 20 24 28 32 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 68 72 76 80

    age

    wealth

    current situation

    future (2030)

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    Impact on financial markets

    Theoretical and empirical analysis suggests that a meltdown isunlikely

    Forward-looking simulationsresults(usually based on closed-

    economy assumptions)

    models suggest that current workers will earn returns around 60 basis points

    below historical norm (given the assumptions in the models, this would

    represent an upper bound)

    Empirical studies report ambiguous results results are different across countries, which would imply that the

    relationship is affected by other fundamental factors

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    Impact on financial markets

    Will there be an asset meltdown? Probably not, but therecould be an impact on prices:

    people may change their saving and investment behaviour (and invest more

    in financial assets) especially if the benefits of public pension schemes are

    significantly reduced

    international capital flows could help to smooth imbalances in domestic

    capital markets (for all kind of assets?)

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    Impact on financial markets: housing

    housing wealth as % of disposable income in the euro area

    Source: ECB estimates based on national data

    1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

    0

    50

    100

    150

    200

    250

    300

    350

    400

    450

    500

    financial wealth

    housing wealth

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    Impact on financial markets: housing

    A significant portion of households income

    is invested in housing

    the relationship between house prices and ageing remain

    largely an open question; difficult to disentangle the

    effect of age from other characteristics (income, marital

    status, education)

    Recent developments in some countries (US,

    UK but also most of euro area countries)

    suggest that households may treat real estate

    as a source of portfolio diversification

    may be risky: a future house prices meltdown?

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    Impact on financial markets: the retirement industry

    Euro area households have invested their private savings more via

    financial intermediaries (particularly retirement industry)

    Source: Eurosystem, as a % of total financial assets

    0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    60

    70

    Belgium France Germany Italy Netherlands

    % of savings

    to institutionsin 1990

    % savings

    to institutions

    in 2005

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    31Source: OECD

    The retirement savings industry

    0

    20

    40

    60

    80

    100

    120

    Belgium Germany Italy Japan Netherlands Sweden UK US

    Pension funds assets, as % of GDP, 2004

    Impact on financial markets: the retirement industry

    Role played by institutional investors is expected to grow and this may

    have a number of implications and possibly an impact on corporate

    governance

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    Impact on financial markets: the retirement industry

    Likely increase in savings for retirement over the next decades

    savings need to be invested and later on withdrawn to finance consumption of

    elderly

    Portfolio allocation of pension funds likely to exert significant pressures on

    financial markets possible shifts towards less risky assets as people become older?

    The extent of the impact is likely to depend on the financial structure and

    in particular on the social security arrangements

    if countries in continental Europe shift more strongly towards funded systems,financial asset prices could in theory show more pronounced swings related to

    demographic changes

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    Impact on financial markets: the retirement industry

    Shift from defined benefits to defined contributions plans portfolio choices will be more aligned with individuals preferences

    Revised industry regulations place more emphasis on riskmanagement

    need to increase the supply of products to hedge against interest rate andinflation risk

    long-dated bonds

    inflation-linked products

    financial innovation

    Instruments to hedge against longevity risks are moreproblematic to develop

    annuity

    reverse mortgages

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    Conclusions

    Scenario analysis shows that projected demographic trends

    imply a decline in average GDP growth in the euro area toaround 1% from 2020 to 2050

    It is important to implement the European Employment

    Guidelines to mitigate the impact of population ageing

    Reforms of pension systems and health care arrangements are

    needed to counteract pressures on public expenditures

    Impact on financial markets will derive from changes in

    portfolio sizes/allocations, the likely increase in the role of

    financial intermediaries and the related adjustment in the supply

    of some financial instruments