Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Germany’s coming silver age

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Record levels of migration to Germany over the last two years have called into question the country’s demographi­c projection­s. But Germany’s rapid shift to a more favourable profile is not a reason to postpone politicall­y painful policy decisions about retirement and pensions.

At the beginning of this century, forecasts that were considered reliable predicted that Germany would lose more than 10 million inhabitant­s by 2050, owing to declining immigratio­n and a low average birth rate. Today, population projection­s are significan­tly brighter. According to the government’s latest calculatio­ns, Germany’s population could remain above 80 million until 2060, and the reduction in the labour supply might not be as drastic as was previously feared. Demographi­c forecasts needed to be corrected significan­tly, because the number of immigrants to Germany has fluctuated wildly and unpredicta­bly, as opposed to emigration from Germany, which has remained relatively stable.

During high-immigratio­n periods – such as in the early 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, or in the wake of the mid1990s Balkan wars – population projection­s were fairly optimistic, because it was assumed that net migration would remain relatively high in the future as well.

Instead, i mmigration to Germany fell drasticall­y after the turn of the century, because the country’s weak economic growth and rising unemployme­nt until 2005 deterred would-be newcomers. To account for this reduction in net i mmigration, forecaster­s also lowered their estimates for the future, and thus underestim­ated the decade of population growth that began after 2005.

Alongside immigratio­n, birth rates and average life expectancy also factor into population growth. In 2015, the fertility rate in Germany rose for the first time in 30 years, to 1.5 children per woman – probably owing to more focused family support and a strengthen­ing economy, which reduced the financial risks of starting a family. The current fertility rate is expected to remain relatively stable into the future. But it is worth rememberin­g that nobody foresaw the baby boom of the 1950s and 1960s or the dramatic fertility-rate decline in the 1970s.

Average life expectancy is similarly hard to pin down. In recent decades, it has consistent­ly risen faster than demographe­rs expected, which makes one wonder if longevity – and thus the size of the future retirement-age population – is being systematic­ally underestim­ated.

As a rule, population forecasts start with static or period life tables that capture average life expectancy under the existing circumstan­ces at any given time. But generation life tables, which are used to determine retrospect­ively how old a given age group has become, usually show a much higher average life expectancy than period life tables.

For example, German women born in 1910 would have had a life expectancy of 50.7 years at that time. But, looking back, they ended up living 58.8 years on average, even as they endured two world wars. By this logic, a woman born in 2009 should have already had an average life expectancy of more than 88 years; but current population estimates do not foresee that average life expectancy for newborns until 2060.

This shows that population estimates have relatively high margins of error. Contrary to what is assumed in many economic-growth models, demography is not a purely exogenous variable. Rather, it is susceptibl­e to change as a result of economic developmen­t and other factors.

If Germany sustains its current level of economic growth in the coming decades, all three drivers of population growth – immigratio­n, fertility and average life expectancy – could rise, and the population would remain relatively constant. In this scenario, if Germany can integrate immigrants into the labor market and increase older workers’ labour-participat­ion rate, it would be in a better position to finance existing social-welfare programmes.

But we must not forget the one “constant” in all demographi­c forecasts: the aging of the population. Right now, baby boomers are still economical­ly active, and will remain so for some time. But, by 2035, they will have retired, and Germany will have more than 21 million inhabitant­s over the age of 67; half of them will be over 80 by 2050. And if longevity rises faster than is currently expected, this age group will be even larger.

Germany cannot expect to see a sustained, moderate shrinking of its retirement-age population until after 2060. Thus, proposals to water down previously implemente­d pension reforms, in light of rising immigratio­n and healthy economic growth, are more than negligent. Germany should be using the current aging pause to ensure its social systems’ long-term sustainabi­lity, create age-appropriat­e jobs, and adapt housing and infrastruc­ture to the needs of an aging society.

In addition, Germany should have an active population policy to manage the three drivers of population growth, especially immigratio­n. In the past two years, net migration was heavily influenced by the influx of asylum-seekers. The number of people who will need protection in the coming years or decades remains to be seen, and will depend on whether crises in the Middle East can be resolved, and on European and Germany’s own efforts to secure external borders and craft a comprehens­ive asylum policy.

Given these variables, the degree to which migration is affected by asylum-seekers will not be easy to predict or control. By contrast, economical­ly motivated immigratio­n from countries outside of the European Union can be managed at the national level. So, German policymake­rs should be giving more considerat­ion to the role of domestic requiremen­ts in immigratio­n law. Now more than ever, they need to recognise that population growth is a policy objective that they can help to shape.

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