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Fiscal Policy Issues in the Aging Societies

Authors :
Bogetic, Zeljko
Onder, Harun
Onal, Anil
Skrok, Emilia
Schwartz, Anita
Winkler, Hernan
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Aging may be one of the most far-reaching processes defining the economic, fiscal, and social changes societies are likely to experience over the next 40 years. The demographic consequences of aging will have a dramatic impact on labor markets, economic growth, social structures--and government budgets. These issues have gained urgency after the second largest global recession in the past 100 years. Based on a broad comparative analysis of countries that include the EU and non-EU European and Central Asian countries, as well as several case studies and model simulations, the paper seeks to provide broad answers--tailored in part to distinct groups of countries according to their aging-fiscal profiles--to major questions facing governments budgets in aging societies: What are the fiscal-aging profiles of Western European, emerging European, and Central Asian countries? In other words, how good or bad is their fiscal situation--"initial conditions"--in view of their emerging aging-related problems? What kind of public spending pressures are likely to emerge in the coming decades, and what will be their relative importance? How do countries compare in terms of the possible impacts of aging on growth and long-term debt sustainability? What can be learned from in-depth and comparative case studies of aging, fiscal sustainability, and fiscal reform? Are there good-practice examples--countries doing things right at the right time--that may offer lessons for the others? And, perhaps most important, given the need for long-term fiscal consolidation for many countries, what kind of revenue and expenditure policy agendas are likely to emerge to mitigate the effects of aging? A key policy conclusion is that countries should aim for early rather than delayed reforms dealing with long-term aging pressures. The urgency is accentuated by the debt situations and/or adverse debt and demographic dynamics in almost all countries but also by the evolving voter preferences. As societies age and voting preferences increasingly reflect the political will of the older population, it will become more difficult to enact the necessary reforms ensuring social and fiscal sustainability.

Subjects

Subjects :
POPULATION STRUCTURE
BUDGET DEFICITS
FISCAL REFORMS
TAX EXEMPTIONS
GROWTH RATES
LONG-TERM CARE
CENTRAL ASIA
AGING
INFLATION
YOUNG PEOPLE
LOW FERTILITY
FISCAL DEFICIT
FUTURE GENERATIONS
FISCAL MANAGEMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT
NUMBER OF CHILDREN
RETIREMENT AGES
MARKET REGULATION
WORKERS
PERSONAL INCOME
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
RETURNS
DEMOGRAPHIC CONSEQUENCES
PENSION
HIGH POPULATION GROWTH
PUBLIC FINANCES
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL SERVICES
AGED
FERTILITY RATES
OLD AGE
EUROPE
PENSIONS
HOLDING
POLICY CHANGE
TAX POLICY
ADULT MORTALITY
FERTILITY
PURCHASING POWER
SECONDARY EDUCATION
INDEBTEDNESS
ELDERLY
DISABILITY
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
IMPLICIT DEBT
INCOME TAXES
PUBLIC DEBT
SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN
INCOME LEVELS
CENTRAL ASIA AGING
PRIVATE SAVINGS
TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGES
WORK FORCE
INDEBTED COUNTRIES
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE
ADVANCED ECONOMIES
INITIAL DEBT
BUDGET CONSTRAINT
LIFE EXPECTANCY
POLITICAL ECONOMY
DEBT BURDENS
POPULATION PROJECTIONS
DEBT RATIO
SOCIAL SYSTEMS
CAPITAL STOCK
FISCAL POLICY
LIABILITY
HEALTH CARE
DEMOGRAPHIC IMPACT
PUBLIC PENSION
HEALTH SYSTEMS
CURRENCY
RETIREMENT AGE
PUBLIC HEALTH
RESPECT
HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
INCOME LEVEL
CLOSED ECONOMY
DEPENDENCY RATIO
CURRENT POPULATION
FEWER CHILDREN
DEBT CRISIS
TAX REVENUES
PUBLIC FINANCE
QUALITY OF LIFE
PENSION CONTRIBUTIONS
PUBLIC
LABOR MARKETS
MORTALITY RATE
ACCUMULATION OF DEBT
INCOME GROWTH
POPULATION SIZE
PENSION SYSTEM
POPULATION DYNAMICS
SHORT TERM DEBT
CHILD MORTALITY
WORKING-AGE POPULATION
REPLACEMENT RATES
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
HOSPITAL
TAX SYSTEM
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
TAX
POPULATION GROWTH RATES
DEMOGRAPHIC
ECONOMIC GROWTH
PENSION FUND
DEBT ISSUANCE
FAMILIES
PHYSICIANS
HEALTH REFORM
PARTICULAR COUNTRY
FINANCIAL SECTOR
BENEFICIARIES
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
PUBLIC BUDGET
INVESTING
WORLD POPULATION
AGE DISTRIBUTION
FINANCIAL CRISIS
TRANSITION COUNTRIES
BALANCE SHEETS
GOVERNMENT BONDS
INCENTIVE STRUCTURE
TREATY
CURRENCY COMPOSITION
STATE GUARANTEES
AGE-RELATED SPENDING
BENEFICIARY
PENSION CONTRIBUTION
ELDERLY PEOPLE
WAGE GROWTH
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
HEALTH SPENDING
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS
PUBLIC EDUCATION
OPEN ECONOMY
YOUNG POPULATIONS
PROGRESS
RATES OF GROWTH
STOCK EXCHANGE
POPULATION DECLINE
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
MORTALITY
GENERATIONAL ACCOUNTS
SOCIAL CHANGES
DEPENDENCY RATIOS
TERTIARY EDUCATION
DIVIDEND
DURABLE
HEALTH SECTOR
SOCIAL SECURITY
RATE OF POPULATION GROWTH
EXCISE TAXES
LOWER FERTILITY
GOVERNMENT BUDGETS
LONG-TERM DEBT
DEVELOPMENT INVESTMENTS
OLD-AGE PENSION
INTERNATIONAL EFFORTS
OLD-AGE
DEFICITS
ACCOUNTING
PORTFOLIOS
AGING COUNTRIES
FINANCES
OLD-AGE PENSIONS
STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS
OIL RESOURCES
DEBT STOCK
FISCAL CONSOLIDATIONS
OUTPUT
RATE OF RETURN
CAREGIVERS
PUBLIC REVENUES
MIGRATION
WORKING POPULATION
LABOR FORCES
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
EXPENDITURES
DEBT MANAGEMENT
QUALITY OF SERVICES
GROWTH RATE
INTERNATIONAL BANK
LIFELONG LEARNING
INEQUITIES
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
GENERATIONAL ACCOUNTING
FISCAL CONSOLIDATION
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
MIGRATION FLOW
DEMOGRAPHIC PROJECTIONS
LABOR FORCE
SAVINGS
DEBT BURDEN
HEALTH SERVICES
IMMIGRATION
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES
NURSES
EXPENDITURE

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2456..0f83b8c410e731065e589a11c2ec7042