Business World

Singapore faces grim future for labor as population ages

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WHILE JAPAN had the biggest slump in its work force in Asia over the last 10 years, Singapore has the most to fear from an aging population over the next two decades.

The city state will face a double whammy: a shrinking work force and slower progress than Asian neighbors in getting more people into the labor market. According to a new study from Oxford Economics, Singapore’s labor supply growth — after accounting for changes to the participat­ion rate — will shrink by 1.7 percentage points in the 10 years through 2026 and by 2.5 percentage points in the decade after that. That’s the worst of a dozen economies in a report by Louis Kuijs, the Hong Kong-based head of Asia economics at Oxford.

Almost all Asian nations will face demographi­c challenges over the next two decades, and efforts to boost labor participat­ion rates — for example, by drawing more women into the work force and raising the retirement age — will only marginally limit the negative impact.

In Singapore, immigratio­n restrictio­ns can partly explain an expected drop in working age population growth from 2027, even as Kuijs credits foreign labor inflows for helping boost that pool over the last decade.

South Korea and Taiwan also will be hard hit by declining labor supply in the decades to come, while for some countries, the pain is only delayed: Thailand’s workforce growth will barely decrease over the next 10 years, but should see a 1.1 percentage point yearly drop in the decade thereafter.

The grim rule of thumb for the region: A 1-percentage-point decline in labor supply growth in any of these areas would shave off a half-point to two-thirds of a percentage point in GDP growth. —

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