The US Census Bureau released
a new report this week about our aging population. Actually, it came out with 4
separate estimates, each based on slightly different underlying assumptions about developments
in the next 40 years. The age structure of the population depends on 3 factors:
fertility, mortality, and immigration. It turns out we can be fairly confident
about the first two; the last one is
far more uncertain. What was fascinating about the report is what most news
media didn’t say about it.
Many major news outlets
didn’t mention the report at all. I suppose it’s not exactly newsworthy, in that
it’s just an updated version of earlier projections, based on the latest
available statistics. The NY Times focused on 2 pieces of data:
the absolute size of the elderly population: 43.1 million in 2012 and nearly
double that, or 83.7 million, in 2050; and the fact that while this may seem dramatic,
the numbers are far more dramatic in other parts of the developed world. People over 65 will make up just over 20% of the US population in 2030 (the
peak year of the elder explosion, when all the baby boomers will have turned
65), but in Japan they will make up 33% of the population and in Germany 28%. Reuters, as reported by Business Insider, also points to the absolute
and relative size of the aging population in the US. In addition, it comments
on the male/female ratio among old people: right now, 66.6% of Americans over
85 are women, but in 2050 the gap between the sexes will have narrowed, and
61.9% will be women. Finally, Business Insider notes that our society in
general and old people in particular will be more racially and ethnically
diverse in another 40 years.
What I didn’t see commented
on was the changing old age dependency ratio (the population age 65 and
over divided by the population from 18-64, multiplied by 100). Right now in the
US this ratio is about 21, which means there are roughly 5 working age people
to support each old person. In 2030, the ratio will be 35, or only about 3
working people per oldster. That means that every person will have to devote a
larger fraction of his or her effort to providing for their elders. But these
projections are for the “middle series,” the average of the various
predictions. Immigration will play a critical role in determining the actually age
structure of the US population over the next 40 years. It will dramatically
impact the size of the working age population, the people who will be
responsible for most of the economic output of the country—and for supporting
the older generation. By 2050, the “High Series” projects 10 million more
people age 18-64 than does the “Middle Series." This is because
we’re likely to see only modest changes in either fertility or mortality rates
in the coming years. The one area where we do have a choice—because it reflects political, not scientific factors—is immigration. So if we want to have a
maximally productive economy, and parenthetically if we want to have a way to
care for all those old people, we need to increase immigration. And we better
start now.
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