Population Aging and the Demand for Goods & Services
Content
This paper analyzes the macroeconomic effect of population aging on the
aggregate demand for goods and services between 2000 and 2040. As the
composition of goods and services consumed varies over the life cycle, the
aggregate demand structure is likely to change as well when the population
is aging. I estimate these microeconomic age-specific household demands
for a set of eight composite goods using a quadratic almost ideal demand
system model.
The projections are carried out in scenarios in order to distinguish: i) the
direct effect of a shift of the age structure, ii) accompanying changes in
the level and distribution of spending power and in household composition.
The results point to significant increases in the expenditure shares of
health and leisure goods and a decline in necessities like food and energy
in all scenarios. The direct effect of a shift in the age structure as well as
the asymmetric intergenerational distribution of spending power have significant
effects on aggregate demand. Changes in household composition
– decreasing average household size, but a slow reduction in the number of
households – do not affect demand substantially. The future design of the
pension system has only a minor impact on the distribution of incomes and
total expenditures and thus also a negligible impact on aggregate demand.
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