Population
ageing is poised to become one of the most significant social
transformations of the twenty-first century, with implications for
nearly all sectors of society, including labour market, the demand
for goods and services, such as housing, transportation and social
protection, as well as family structures and intergenerational
ties. The
contributions of older persons to society are invaluable. Many such
contributions cannot be measured in economic terms – such as
caregiving, volunteering, and passing cultural traditions to younger
generations.
In
2008, there were 3.2 people of working age for every pensioner, and
this is projected to fall to to 2.8 by 2030, creating an increasing
dependency ratio. The dependency ratio is, in its simplest form, the
ratio of those in a population who do not work (are dependent, and
inactive) to those who do work (are active). Within the next few
decades, working-age adults in the UK will need to support double the
number of elderly people than they do now, putting immense pressure
on welfare systems and wiping out as much as 3% of potential economic
output by 2050. Unless technology delivers offsetting productivity
gains, these findings highlight the need to welcome immigration to
boost labour supply.
Migration
offsets many of the adverse effects of an ageing population on the
labour market, with the average age of migrants lower than the host
population. The downside effect of the ageing is compensated by
younger migrant workers who are willing and able to undertake work.
With immigration, on average 800,000 per year, the population size in
the EU is likely to be about the same level in 2050 as it is today.
However, with no migration there would be immediate moderate decline
followed by a steep decline after 2030, reaching 451 million by 2025,
and 413 million by 2050, a fall of 40 million across the EU. Indeed
some projections indicate that without mass immigration into the EU
of around 100 million there will be a need for a significant increase
in labour force participation rates for all EU countries and a rise
in retirement ages of 10 years by 2050 to compensate for the impact
of demographic ageing on the work force.
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