Intergenerational Transfers and National Transfer Accounts in East Asia. Andrew Mason University of Hawaii at Manoa East-West Center

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Intergenerational Transfers and National Transfer Accounts in East Asia Andrew Mason University of Hawaii at Manoa East-West Center

Demography Vital rates are changing in East Asia Increased longevity Low TFR China: 1.4 Japan: 1.3 Korea: 1.2 Leading to rapid and large changes in age structure Temporary increase in share of working-age population Followed by a permanent decline in the share of the working-age population and a rise of the retired population.

Key Issues How will population aging influence economic growth (per capita and aggregate) generational equity (cross-sectional and longitudinal) What policies can be pursued to influence the outcome? Changes in the economic lifecycle Investment in physical or human capital

Evidence Important research by Bloom, Canning, and Williamson and Kelly and Schmidt. Also Samuelson, Diamond, Lee, and Willis. Research with Ron Lee, Sang-Hyop Lee, Hiro Ogawa, Tim Miller, An-Chi Tung, and others. National Transfers Accounts estimates China: Li Ling, Quilin Chen, and Yu Jiang Japan: Naohiro Ogawa, Rikiya Matsukura, Chawla Amonthep Korea: Chong-Bum An, Young-Jun Chun, Sang-Hyop Lee Taiwan: An-Chi Tung and Mun-Sim Lai Research teams in 24 other countries www.ntaccounts.org

Economic Lifecycle Effects of age structure depend on economic lifecycle. Labor income is concentrated in a relatively small portion of the lifespan. Consumption exceeds labor income over a relatively large portion of the lifespan. Large deficits for young and old. A Thought Experiment won (1000s) 14000 12000 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 Republic of Korea, 2000 Labor income Consumption 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Age Source: An et al., forthcoming; www.ntaccounts.org. Change population age structure holding economic lifecycle constant How will the effective number of producers change relative to the effective number of consumers? Economic support ratio answers this question.

Swings in the Economic Support Ratio Decline in fertility produces a boom (first demographic dividend), then a bust. Decline in Japan is well underway. Peak is near in China and Republic of Korea. Source: Mason, Lee, and Lee forthcoming. SRt ( ) wxnx ( ) ( ) cxnx ( ) ( ) x w(x) productivity weights; c(x) consumption weights. x

Is there more to say? Economic lifecycle might change Changes in retirement and productivity of older workers. Changes in costs of health care and longterm care. Changes in age structure might lead to a second demographic dividend Investment in physical capital Investment in human capital

Labor Income Profiles: E Asia Relative to labor income (30-49) 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 Early peak except in Japan China (2002) Japan (2004) S.Korea (2000) Taiwan (2003) Late peak in Japan: seniority wages 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90+ Low earning at old ages.

Comparison with Europe and US Relative to labor income (30-49) 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 Labor income higher in the 50s in Europe and US China (2002) Japan (2004) S.Korea (2000) Taiwan (2003) Europe6 US (2003) 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90+ Labor income lower in 65+ in Europe

Trend in Taiwan Labor Income Labor income has become compressed in Taiwan over time 1.2 Per Capita Labor Income Over Time: Taiwan 1977-2003 Later entry into the labor market Earlier retirement Normalized to Mean of 30-49 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 54 60 66 72 78 84 90 Age

Consumption Profiles in East Asia Per capita values (normalized on mean labor income 30-49) 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 China (2004) Japan (2004) S.Korea (2000) Taiwan (1998) 0.2 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90+

1.6 Consumption Profiles: Europe and US Per capita values (normalized on mean labor income 30-49) 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 Steep increases at old ages in Finland, Germany, Sweden, and US 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90+ Austria (2000) Finland (2004) Germany (2003) Hungary (2005) Slovenia (2004) Spain (2000) Sweden (2003) US (2003)

Economic Lifecycle Potential for increasing productivity and labor income of older workers in E Asia. Economic research, e.g. Gruber and Wise, shows that incentives influence age at retirement (Europe versus US and Japan). Many impediments, e.g., mandatory retirement that can be addressed BUT strong trend towards early retirement and potential for substantial growth in consumption at old ages.

Possible responses to the decline in the economic support ratio First dividend is consumed; standards of living will fall. Dividend is invested in physical capital Workers increase their saving Fewer children upon whom to rely in old-age Longer life and duration of retirement. Response depends on expectations about public and familial transfer systems. Dividend is invested in human capital Quality-quantity tradeoff: fewer children, but invest more per child Return on investment depends on continuation of transfer systems. Results: Possible to maintain standards of living of the elderly and overall standards of living despite population aging.

Aging and Accumulation of Assets Simulation results - Open economy - General equilibrium - Old-age transfers exogenous Source: Mason, Lee, and Lee forthcoming. Key Results If elderly rely on transfer programs for 65% of their lifecycle deficit, assets increase by very little and standards of living fall. If elderly rely on transfer programs for only 35% of their lifecycle deficit, assets increase substantially and standards of living rise.

Human Capital Fertility Tradeoff Strong tradeoff between TFR and HK. Estimated elasticity is close to -1. Implies that total investment in human capital doesn t decline with fertility. ln HK per child 2 1.5 1 0.5 TW JP CH KR y = -0.9708x + 1.7985 R2 = 0.5084 China has very low HK spending given its TFR. 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 ln TFR Notes: HK is synthetic cohort measure of lifetime spending on child health and education. Values are normalized on mean labor income of workers 30-49. Source: Lee and Mason, forthcoming. European Journal of Population; Source of data: National Transfer Accounts, www.ntaccounts.org.

Figure 6. Macro Indicators: Baseline Results 160.0 150.0 140.0 Boom 130.0 (demoraphic 120.0 dividend) 110.0 100.0 90.0 Fertility bust, but 80.0 consumption 70.0 remains high 60.0 Value (percent of year 0) 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Period Support ratio C/ EA GNP/N Fertility recovers: modest effect on C/EA Bottom line: Low fertility leads to higher consumption. Human capital investment has moderated the impact of fertility swings on standards of living. Source: Lee and Mason forthcoming.

Wrapping Up Perhaps changes in the economic lifecycle will ameliorate the adverse effects of population aging, but large decline in economic support ratio is almost certain. Investment in physical and human capital can lead to a second demographic dividend and sustain higher standards of living. The role of transfer programs is complex as they undermine capital accumulation but complement human capital accumulation.

Importance of policy Removing impediments to productivity for older workers. Controlling costs of health and long-term care. Restoring the health of the global financial system. Developing sustainable transfer programs. For China, increased investment in human capital.

The End