China Daily Global Weekly

Tech can assist aging societies

China, ROK, Japan must cooperate, innovative­ly tackle impact of rapid fall in childbirth­s

- By PARK DAN-BEE The author is an associate professor in the Department of Internatio­nal Trade, Kangwon National University. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Thanks to advances in medical science and technology, the mortality rate across the world, especially in developed countries, has decreased while the social and economic cost of bringing up a child has increased, leading to a rapid decline in childbirth­s and rapidly aging population­s.

An aging society brings about intergener­ational conflicts, as science fiction writer Bernard Werber has shown in his short story, The

Tree of Possibilit­ies.

It is about a government comprising young individual­s that confines senior citizens above a certain age to facilities where they can live humanely but with limited access to even essential medical and welfare services, in order to reduce social welfare expenditur­e.

In reality. as the economical­ly dependent elderly population of a country increases, its growth potential will decline and social expenditur­e for the elderly will increase.

According to the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t, the old-age dependency ratio is defined as the number of individual­s aged 65 or above per 100 people of working age (those aged between 20 and 64).

A country’s old-age to working-age ratios is affected by the mortality rate, fertility rate and migration. For example, OECD countries have been seeing a continuous increase in life expectancy which most analysts say will continue.

As of 2022, 29.1 percent of Japan’s population, 18 percent of the Republic of Korea’s population and

14.9 percent of China’s population were aged 65 or above. Although the aging population­s of the ROK and China are relatively low, their pace of transition to an aging society is expected to be quite rapid.

Also, in all three countries, the working-age population has been dwindling due to the declining fertility rate. As the old-age dependency ratio increases, the social costs of supporting the elderly will also increase.

A choice has to be made between using limited resources and factors of production such as capital, technology and labor for economic growth, or providing welfare for the elderly.

But emphasizin­g the former, for groups of people like those in Werber’s short story, is tantamount to violating human rights, which could give rise to social conflict.

Countries witnessing declining population­s have implemente­d various policies to help increase the total fertility rate and overcome the aging population problem.

The ROK, for example, has introduced an extended paternity leave system, increased public childcare facilities and offered more tax reduction to parents for every child they have.

Japan provides subsidies for parents with young children and has reduced education costs to help increase the fertility rate. But none of the measures has yielded the desired results because they are aimed at short-term solutions when family planning decisions are based on long-term cash flow. Rather than focusing on policies to address the falling fertility rate and declining population, it is necessary to implement policies that maximize the use of socially available resources to achieve sustainabl­e growth. To increase productivi­ty, physical and intangible assets can be used through digital transforma­tion and technologi­cal innovation; and to make the labor market more flexible, available human resources can be maximized through the implementa­tion of policies. According to a 2023 Internatio­nal Monetary Fund report, “Accelerati­ng Innovation and Digitaliza­tion in Asia to Boost Productivi­ty”, indicators show that Asian companies, especially those from the ROK, Japan and China, are leading the process of digital transforma­tion and innovation in productivi­ty. If medical and education services can be stably provided through digital transforma­tion and productivi­ty can be improved by using artificial intelligen­ce, the decline in productivi­ty caused by an aging society can be overcome.

But to achieve these goals, it is necessary to encourage spillovers of knowledge and diffusion of technologi­es by strengthen­ing intraregio­nal cooperatio­n among Asian countries.

Cooperativ­e policies should be designed to provide incentives for technology innovation­s by improving regulation­s and strengthen­ing intellectu­al property rights protection.

On the other hand, non-frontier enterprise­s can get the opportunit­y to promote innovation­s and contribute to sustainabl­e growth through the diffusion of technologi­es.

They have a better chance to improve their productivi­ty through intra-regional cooperatio­n in productivi­ty innovation.

And apart from cooperatio­n among the ROK, China and Japan, higher levels of technology diffusion and innovation­s in productivi­ty can be achieved through global trade, participat­ion in global value chains and foreign direct investment in Asian countries.

For sustainabl­e societies in the ROK, China, and Japan, it is expedient for the three countries to form a trilateral cooperatio­n mechanism on aging societies to overcome the common challenges of the negative effects of population aging.

 ?? LI MIN / CHINA DAILY ??
LI MIN / CHINA DAILY

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