There is a
looming issue that will have an impact on everything in the global economy.
Japan is already feeling the effects and major economies including China
and the United States are lining up for their "turn at bat".
Unfortunately, there is almost nothing that can be done about this issue;
central bankers will be incapable of reversing the impact and governments will
find themselves helpless in the face of the upcoming crisis. While it almost
seems laughable to those of us that are Baby Boomers who spent our formative
years growing up in an ever-expanding population (remember the warnings about
population overgrowth?), human beings, particularly in developed nations,
simply aren't procreating enough. A recent study by the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control looks at the looming demographic issues that will change the
future for millions of Americans.
In the 2017 edition of the
National Vital Statistics which
looks at the provisional 2017 data on U.S. births, the CDC provides us with a
clear picture of the changing birth and fertility rates over the past 50 years.
Here is a graphic from the report showing the number of live births and
the fertility rate for the United States since 1970:
The provisional number of live
births in 2017 for the United States was 3,853,472, down 2 percent on a
year-over-year basis and the lowest number in 30 years. To put this into
perspective, back in 1987, there were 242,289,000 Americans compared to 326,965,105 on December 31, 2017, an increase of
84,676,105 or 34.9 percent. In other words, 35 percent more Americans
produced fewer children than they did back in 1987.
From the Census Bureau, here is the 2016 population tree for the
United States:
Here is what the population tree
looked like in 2000:
As you can see, the population tree
for the United States is looking more and more top heavy as the years pass, the
mark of an aging population that is not being replaced at the same rate as it
is aging.
Here is graphic comparing the population
trees for the United States from 1960 and a projection to 2060:
Just for fun, here is the current, rather top-heavy population tree for Japan:
...and here is a graphic showing Japan's dropping
fertility rate:
Welcome to our future.
Here is a graphic showing how the number of
older adults (aged 65 and older) will outnumber the number of children by 2035:
By 2030, all baby boomers will be
older than age 65 resulting in a population that has one-in-five older
adults.
According to the Institute for
Family Studies (IFS), the American total fertility rate is nearing its historical
low as shown here:
What is particularly interesting is
that the decline in fertility varies greatly with ethnicity/race as shown here:
While all of this may seem rather
academic, from Japan's experience, a declining birthrate has massive economic
and social impacts. Here are three examples of what could happen:
1.) the demand for housing will
decline, resulting in declining or stagnating housing prices, since the housing market is predicated on the "greater fool
theory" (i.e. if there are no greater and younger fools, the demand for
housing will, at the very least, not increase).
2.) the funding of social
entitlement programs and pension plans will fall on the shoulders of fewer and
fewer workers.
3.) the demand for equities could
change as older Americans look to invest their savings in less risky assets.
In any case, thanks to the
fertility collapse, the United States of the future will be a far different
place. All we need to do is look at the example of Japan and its moribund economy over the past three decades to see what lies ahead for Americans.
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