Aging, Factor Prices and Capital Flows

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Aging, Factor Prices and Capital Flows Andrea Bonfatti, University of Padua Selahattin İmrohoroğlu, University of Southern California Sagiri Kitao, University of Tokyo January 17, 2019 Prepared for For a Better Future: Demographic Changes and Macroeconomic Challenges

Big issue: aging, fiscal sustainability and capital flows A major challenge facing not only Japan, but also all economies, developed and developing, is the aging of the populations, driven by ØRising longevity ØLow fertility rates (down to 1.76 in the US in 2017) à Rising old-age dependency ratios and fiscal tensions associated with old-age transfer programs.

Big issue: aging, fiscal sustainability and capital flow But the countries and regions of the world differ in : ØThe timing and the severity of these demographic trends. à Advanced economies started aging earlier than emerging/developing regions. ØGenerosity of the age-dependent transfer programs and implicit debt. à Pension systems are less developed or generous in less developed economies, posing less fiscal challenges than in advanced economics. ØDiffering productivity growth rates. ØAll of these affect national saving and regional/domestic investment differently. à Capital flows depend on all these factors.

What We Do: Develop a three-region model of the world economy Calibrate the model and compute transition paths Characterize future capital flows To highlight the implications of the different demographic trends, social insurance institutions, and productivity paths, we develop a three-region model of the world. ØHigh Income (HI) region: United States, Canada, Europe (EU28), Australia and New Zealand. ØMiddle Income (MI) region: China, HK, Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Viet Nam, India, Mexico, Brazil, Russia, Saudi Arabia, UAE, South Africa and Turkey ØJapan ( J )

National Income Accounts, Household Income Data, Demographic Data and Projections For HI and MI, use data from United Nations World Population Prospects: the 2017 Revision (2017) ØHarmonized data and projections for all countries from 1950 to 2100 For Japan, use 2017 estimates of the National Institute of Population and Social Security Research (IPSS). ØThe UN projections for Japan tend to be very optimistic. For all, we use World Bank (WDI), IMF (WEO), OECD (Revenue) For Japan, we use BSWS

Demographic trends in the three regions Life expectancy Total fertility rate Source: United Nation (2017) and IPSS (2017)

Demographic trends in the three regions Normalized populations Total populations Source: United Nation (2017) and IPSS (2017)

Demographic trends in the three regions Population growth rates (%) Old-age dependency ratios (>=65/20-64, %) Source: United Nation (2017) and IPSS (2017)

Factor prices and capital flows These demographic trends and accompanying fiscal adjustments tend to raise the capital-labor ratio and reduce returns to capital (interest rates. High capital-labor ratio (due to faster/more severe aging) leads to lower returns to capital. Lower total factor productivity (TFP) leads to lower returns to capital. When regions/economies experience nonsynchronous aging and differing TFP growth rates, private capital tends to flow to regions/economies with higher return environments (lower capital labor ratio and higher TFP). Private savings are determined mostly by life cycle motivations and aging tends to reduce aggregate saving with a smaller fraction of savers in the economy. Therefore, future paths of national savings and regional/domestic investments are driven mostly by demographic trends and differences in these and other institutional factors can change capital flows across regions.

Intuition on Capital Flows Given equal quantities of national saving, there are two factors that determine capital flows across regions:!"#$!% #& '()*#(+ = 0.35 (345) 7 9:.;< 0.06 8 1. a higher TFP in a region, holding the capital-labor ratio the same in all regions, yields a higher rate of return to capital and therefore attracts foreign capital 2. assuming identical levels of TFP across regions, a lower capitallabor ratio in a region produces a higher return to capital and attracts foreign capital.

Labor supply: exogenous High income Middle income Japan

Capital stock: closed economy High income Middle income Japan

Capital-labor ratio: closed economy High income Middle income Japan

Interest rates : closed economy

Interest rates : closed & open

Capital-flow (current account) to GDP (to GDP)

External wealth to GDP Relative to GDP of each region.

Capital adjustment cost: current account of Japan (% of GDP) Data computed based on Hayashi and Prescott (2002) and the SNA

Capital adjustment cost: external wealth of Japan (% of GDP) Data computed based on Hayashi and Prescott (2002) and the SNA

Wealth decomposition of Japan : open economy (to GDP) Household wealth Govt bond Capital External wealth 0 Household asset (incl. bequest) = Capital + Government bond + External wealth

Saving and investment in Japan Closed economy Open economy

Remarks The projected unsynchronized demographic aging across regions, differences in the social security systems, and differing TFP growth tend to induce capital to flow into Japan. ØOver the next few decades, what implies lower closed-economy interest rates in the MI or higher interest rates in Japan will generate a greater capital flow into Japan and (larger) current account deficits. In the open economy, wages are higher and taxes are low due to the capital inflow to Japan, implying more benefits of more openness for future generations.

Remarks If Japan s working age population falls slower than projected, fiscal sustainability is easier, and, capital flows in much faster. If Japan s TFP grows faster, fiscal sustainability is easier, and, capital flows in a bit faster. If MI longevity converges to that of Japan, capital flows in much faster. If MI makes pensions more generous, capital flows in slower (as MI saves less).