Demographics, Wealth, and Global Imbalances in the Twenty-First Century

Adrien Auclert, Hannes Malmberg, Frederic Martenet, M. Rognlie
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引用次数: 37

Abstract

We use a sufficient statistic approach to quantify the general equilibrium effects of population aging on wealth accumulation, expected asset returns, and global imbalances. Combining population forecasts with household survey data from 25 countries, we measure the compositional effect of aging: how a changing age distribution affects wealth-to-GDP, holding the age profiles of assets and labor income fixed. In a baseline overlapping generations model this statistic, in conjunction with cross-sectional information and two standard macro parameters, pins down general equilibrium outcomes. Since the compositional effect is positive, large, and heterogeneous across countries, our model predicts that population aging will increase wealth-to- GDP ratios, lower asset returns, and widen global imbalances through the twenty-first century. These conclusions extend to a richer model in which bequests, individual savings, and the tax-and-transfer system all respond to demographic change. Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.
21世纪的人口、财富和全球失衡
我们使用充分的统计方法来量化人口老龄化对财富积累、预期资产回报和全球失衡的一般均衡效应。结合人口预测和来自25个国家的家庭调查数据,我们衡量了老龄化的构成效应:在资产和劳动收入的年龄特征固定的情况下,年龄分布的变化如何影响财富占gdp的比例。在基线重叠代模型中,该统计数据与横截面信息和两个标准宏观参数相结合,确定了一般均衡结果。由于构成效应是积极的、巨大的、不同国家的异质性的,我们的模型预测,人口老龄化将增加财富与GDP的比率,降低资产回报率,并在21世纪扩大全球失衡。这些结论延伸到一个更丰富的模型,在这个模型中,遗赠、个人储蓄和税收和转移系统都对人口变化做出反应。国家经济研究局工作论文系列的机构订阅者和发展中国家的居民可以在www.nber.org免费下载本文。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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