Christopher Ragan Department of Economics McGill University and David Dodge Chair in Monetary Policy...
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Transcript of Christopher Ragan Department of Economics McGill University and David Dodge Chair in Monetary Policy...
Christopher Ragan
Department of EconomicsMcGill University
andDavid Dodge Chair in Monetary Policy
C.D. Howe Institute
November 2011
Canada’s Looming“Fiscal Squeeze”
Great stuff that I Great stuff that I won’twon’t talk about: talk about:
Outline of Talk
1. The basic demographics of aging
2. The looming “fiscal squeeze”
3. Some non-fiscal solutions?
4. Difficult decisions
3
A declining fertility rate has reduced the population growth rate ...
Source: Statistics Canada, medium-growth projection. The 1971 observation is omitted due to a level change in the definition of the series.
4
Current fertility rate ~ 1.6 children per woman
... which inevitably leads to population aging.
Source: Office of the Chief Actuary’s 23rd Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan and Statistics Canada.
1970, Population: 21.7 M
8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8
0-4
15-19
30-34
45-49
60-64
75-79
90-94
percent of population
Male Female
2008, Population: 33.3 M
8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8
0-4
15-19
30-34
45-49
60-64
75-79
90-94
percent of population
Male Female
2040, Population: 41.2 M
8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8
0-4
15-19
30-34
45-49
60-64
75-79
90-94
percent of population
Male Female
Distribution of the Population By Sex and Age Group
5
Aging will markedly reduce the working-age share of the population ...
Source: Office of the Chief Actuary’s 23rd Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan.
Share of people aged 15-64 in Total Population
55
60
65
70
75
1966 1972 1978 1984 1990 1996 2002 2008 2014 2020 2026 2032 2038
Historical Projected
(percent)
Entry of the baby boom generation into the labour market.
Baby boomers gradually reaching retirement age.
6
... and will also cause a shift toward groups with lower LF participation rates …
Source: Author’s calculations based on data from Statistics Canada, Labour Force Survey.7
… resulting in a reduction in the aggregate labour-force participation rate.
Source: Data from 1976-2009, Statistics Canada; projections from 2010-2040, Office of the Chief Actuary (2010),
25th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan.8
Two different directions for this talk:
9
GDP/POP = (GDP/E) x (E/LF) x (LF/POP)
Future path of living standards
Future fiscal implications
Past 40 years
Next 40 years
Per capita income = (labour productivity) X (employment rate) X (LF participation rate)
10
Source: Author’s calculations based on data from Statistics Canada.
The looming “fiscal squeeze”: Part 1
Over the next ~30 years there will be:
reduced growth in real per capita GDP
(for any given rate of productivity growth)
reduced growth in per capita tax base
(growth rate will be cut roughly in half!)
11
1. Need for more public spending:
Health-Care Spending
Elderly Benefits
2. Offsetting effects expected to be small:
Education, children’s benefits and some social services
12
The looming “fiscal squeeze”: Part 2
Not surprisingly, per capita health-care expenditures rise rapidly as we age ...
Source: Author’s calculations based on data from Statistics Canada and the Canadian Institute for Health Information.
13
... but “other factors” will also contribute to rising health-care costs.
Source: OECD (2006), Table A2.3, and author’s calculations.FYI: Total public spending on HC increased from 5.4 to 7.5 percent of GDP between 1975 and 2008.
14
Rising elderly benefits will also put upward pressure on government spending as the population ages.
Source: Office of the Chief Actuary (2008), 8th Actuarial Report on the OAS program, and author’s calculations.
15
2015 2030 2040
0
Change in ppts of GDP
“Fiscal
Squeeze”
T/GDP
G/GDP4.2
An illustration of the fiscal squeeze:
2020
Some popular non-fiscal solutions?
1. Increase immigration rate?
2. Increase fertility rate?
3. Increase labour-force participation rate?
4. Restrain the growth of health-care spending?
5. Increase the productivity growth rate?
17
What broad fiscal choices are available?
1. Restrain spending growth- especially on non-age-related items?
2. Increase tax rates (or the “tax burden”)
3. Defer the problem - increase borrowing (public debt)
18
2015 2030 2040
0
Change in ppts of GDP
“Fiscal
Squeeze”
T/GDP
G/GDP4.2
How much debt?
2020
Area = accumulated debt
= 25×4.2×.5 = 52.5
For Canadian governments, this would mean a return to the “debt wall” of the mid 1990s.
Source: Statistics Canada (National Balance Sheet Accounts) and author’s calculations. 20
Debt wall?
So, some fiscal adjustment will be needed.
Summary and Final Thoughts
1. A large, two-part “fiscal squeeze” is heading our way.
2. We must adjust in coming years – but we have many choices.
3. This is not about small versus big government – it is about avoiding high public debt.
4. There will be renewed tensions between federal and provincial governments.
5. We need to start talking soon about fiscal priorities!
22
Thank you. Questions?
24