On the Consequences of Demographic Change for Rates of Returns to Capital, and the Distribution of Wealth and Welfare
Content
In the industrialized world the population is aging over time, reducing
the fraction of the population in working age. Consequently labor
is expected to be scarce, relative to capital, with an ensuing decline in
the real return on capital. This paper uses demographic projections together
with a large scale multi-country Overlapping Generations Model
with uninsurable idiosyncratic uncertainty to quantify the distributional
and welfare consequences of these changes in factor prices induced by the
demographic transition.
In our model capital can freely flow between different regions in the
OECD (the U.S., the EU and the rest of the OECD). Thus international
capital flows may in principle mitigate the decline in rates of returns one
would expect in the U.S. if it were a closed economy.
We find exactly the opposite. In the U.S. as an open economy, rates
of return are predicted to decline by 86 basis points between 2005 and
2080. If the U.S. were a closed economy, this decline would amount to
only 78 basis points. This result is due to the fact that other regions in
the OECD will age even more rapidly; therefore the U.S. is “importing”
the more severe aging problem from these regions, especially Europe. A
similar conclusion is reached if we let capital flow freely between the OECD
and the rest of the world (ROW). While ROW currently has a younger
population structure, it is predicted to age even more severely in the next
decades, giving rise to an even more pronounced decline in world rates of
return to capital. In order to evaluate the welfare consequences of the demographic transition
we ask the following hypothetical question: suppose a household
economically born in 2005 would live through the economic transition with
changing factor prices induced by the demographic change (but keeping
her own survival probabilities constant at their 2005 values), how would
its welfare have changed, relative to a situation without a demographic
transition? We find that households experience significant welfare losses
due to the demographic transition, in the order of 2 −5% of consumption,
depending on their initial productivity level and the design of the pension
system. These losses are mainly due to the fact that lower future returns
to capital make it harder for households to save for retirement. On the
other hand, if the OECD suddenly opens up to ROW in 2005 and ROW
has higher returns to capital before the world capital market integration,
then these losses are reduced to 1.5 - 2.5%.
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