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If the generations fall out'''

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Title: If the generations fall out'''


1
If the generations fall out...
  • Ageing population Facts behind the fiction

2
If...the generations fall out
  • BBC programme, Wednesday 24 March
  • BBC2 10 p.m.
  • Innovative drama-documentary series called IF
    tackled the pensions and ageing population
    crisis.
  • IF looked at the tough choices Britain must
    make to deflect the fall-out of an ageing
    population.

3
If...the generations fall out
  • All the drama-documentaries in the IF series are
    based on rigorous journalism and research.
  • This presentation covers some facts about the
    impact that an ageing population will have on the
    U.K. and abroad.

4
If...the generations fall out
  • Are we heading for a future of protest and
    destruction? the BBC programme asks
  • The baby boomer generation have lived well, but
    the next generation may not be so lucky.
  • Will we have a rebellion on our hands by 2024 ?
  • One person thinks so "Anyone that doesn't think
    there's a big generational war coming must be on
    Prozac"
  • Laurence Kotlikoff, professor of economics at
    Boston University and author of 'The Coming
    Generational Storm'.

5
If...the generations fall out
  • We are not going to keep quiet when a band of
    pampered pensioners steal the future from us.
  • Chet Tremmel, Foundation for the Rights of Future
    Generations

6
The Baby Boom...
and the Senior Boom...
  • From January 1946 to 1964, most industrialised
    countries lived the "baby-boom".
  • An unprecedented demographical phenomenon that
    provoked a massive arrival of babies.
  • But it has left a lot of widows, so
  • The senior boom is in fact a woman's boom

7
The Senior Boom
is a Female Boom...
  • Facts prove that the baby boom is in fact a
    woman's boom !
  • At 60 years and over, there are 142 women for 100
    men,
  • at 75 and over 191 women for 100 men and
  • at 85 and over 281 women for 100 men.

8
Statistics
  • There are currently 11 million people in the UK
    between 45 and 60, the so-called 'baby boomers'.
  • They own 70 of the nation's wealth.
  • In 20 years time, they could own 85-90 of
    disposable income in the UK.
  • Source Martin Raymond, The Future Laboratory

9
Golden Years
  • In 2024, the baby boomer generation, currently
    in their forties and fifties, will be starting to
    retire
  • Number of people over 65 will have increased by
    nearly 50 since 2004. And this is just the
    beginning...
  • The ageing population is not the only problem.
  • A low birth rate will mean there are fewer
    numbers of younger people.
  • This combination is one of the major challenges
    Britain will face in the future.

10
If...the generations fall out
  • Choices about whether to increase
  • immigration,
  • the birth rate,
  • the age of retirement or
  • taxes, or
  • whether to reduce
  • pensions,
  • means-testing healthcare and
  • lowering the voting age to lessen the burden on
    the young.

11
Europes over 50s
  • Europe had/will have
  • 33 of over 50's in 2000 (against USA 27.5 )
  • 41.5 in 2020 (against 35 in the USA),
  • Representing
  • 86.1 of 45-59 years,
  • 67.46 of 60-74 years,
  • 33.75 of 75-89 years old and
  • 3.34 of 90's and over,
  • or, more than 190 million people

12
Developed countries and pensions
  • Government spending on pensions and health care
    in developed countries is on track to grow far
    more rapidly than official projections suggest
    and could trigger a global financial crisis
    unless steps are taken to control costs
  • CSIS Global Aging Initiative report
  • Steps are being taken to address this global
    challenge, such as

13
Developed countries and pensions
  • replacing or supplementing pay-as-you-go pension
    systems with funded ones,
  • extending working lives, and
  • removing obstacles to productivity growth.
  • Reform is needed most urgently in the countries
    of continental Europe and Japan,
  • where retirement systems are the most expensive
    and
  • the ageing trend is the most severe.
  • CSIS Global Aging Initiative report

14
Developed countries and pensions
  • "Gone are the days when we could effortlessly
    make benefit promises and leave it to future
    politicians to figure out how to pay for them.
  • "For a growing number of countries, the future is
    here."
  • GAI Research Director Richard Jackson

15
Consequences...
  • The consequences of global aging will reach far
    beyond public budgets.
  • Global aging "promises to restructure the
    economy, reorganize financial markets, reshape
    the family, redefine politics, and even rearrange
    the world order,"
  • Shrinking workforces may soon make 'aging
    recessions' the normal state of affairs in much
    of the developed world.
  • Growing public-sector pension deficits will crowd
    out productive investment.

16
Consequences...
  • If the developed countries fail to confront the
    aging challenge, they risk a future of slowly
    growing wages and stagnant after-tax living
    standards."
  • Greece, where retirement begins at age 55, could
    see public pension spending rise an additional
    19 percent of GDP by 2050, with total public
    pension and health spending reaching
    44 percent of GDP.
  • In Spain, public pension spending could rise by
    16 percent of GDP, with total public pension and
    health spending reaching 37 percent of GDP by the
    mid-century.

17
The detail...
  • France
  • Combined health and pension outlays are on track
    to rise by 15 percent of GDP by the mid-century.
  • Total government spending would absorb as much as
    two-thirds of GDP.
  • Germany, Norway, and Austria
  • combined pension and health outlays could exceed
    one-third of GDP.
  • In Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Italy,
    Japan, the Netherlands, and Sweden,
  • combined outlays could exceed one-quarter of GDP.

18
Unsustainable benefit promises...
  • "Unsustainable benefit promises have become the
    principal source of retirement insecurity in most
    industrial countries"
  • "It's a classic case of having too much of a good
    thing."
  • Paul S. Hewitt, director of the CSIS Global Aging
    Initiative (with my emphasis).

19
Pensioners incomes as percentage of
non-pensioners incomes
  • A separate cross-country comparison of pensioner
    incomes relative to the rest of the population
    was made based on eight country studies that used
    the family as the unit of analysis.
  • This showed pensioners' relative income to be
    lower in Britain than in all the countries
    examined except Australia.
  • Graph follows...

20
Pensioners incomes as percentage of
non-pensioners incomes
Source Office of National Statistics Pensions
and pensioners
21
Pensioners incomes as percentage of
non-pensioners incomes
  • Relative incomes of pensioner couples were
    slightly lower in Britain compared with USA,
    Canada and the Netherlands
  • but substantially lower compared with Germany,
    Italy and France.
  • Among non-married pensioners, relative incomes
    were much lower in Britain than in Canada and all
    the EU countries shown.
  • Non-married women had lower incomes than similar
    men in all eight countries.

EU members?
22
Statistics
  • By 2040, number of people over 64 in Britain is
    expected to grow from 9.5 million to 15 million.
  • Source Catalyst Report
  • In 2000, 11.2 million people lt 15 years in UK.
  • By 2040, will have decreased to 8.7 million.
  • Source Centre for Strategic and International
    Studies
  • 1999 working population was 47.8 of total UK
    population.
  • By 2030 it will be 44.5.
  • This could mean a shortfall of 2 million workers.
  • Source Government Actuary's Department

23
Statistics
  • About half of spending on hospital and community
    health services in Britain is for people over
    65.
    Source Catalyst Report
  • Figures for the number of dependent older people
    in England are projected to grow from 2.5 million
    in 2001 to just over four million in 2031 - an
    increase of 57.
  • Source Personal Social Services Research Unit
    (PSSRU) report on long term care/Government
    Actuary's Department

24
Statistics
  • When pensions were introduced in the early 1900s,
    there were 22 people of working age in Britain
    for every retired person.
  • In 2024 there will be less than three.
  • Source Office of National Statistics
  • Over 50s buy 80 of all top of the range cars,
    50 of skincare products, 80 of leisure
    cruises...
  • Source Senioragency International

25
Statistics
  • Over the last two decades, consumption by
    Europe's over 50s has risen three times as fast
    as that of the rest of the population.
  • Source Senioragency International
  • British State pensions as a percentage of wages
    are the lowest of all of the G7 countries
  • Source Phil Mullan, The Imaginary Timebomb
  • People aged 60 and over already outnumber
    children under 16 in the UK for the first time
    Source 2001 Census

26
Norway...
  • In Norway, the 50 own more than 75 of the
    total national assets !
  • In 2015, more than half of the Norwegian
    population will be over 50 years old.
  • Source Senioragency International

27
Over 50s
  • Across the developed world, they are
  • active
  • happy to spend their time and money to have fun
    and
  • to re-equip themselves in automobile, houses,
    clothes, make-up, in wine, restaurants, travels,
    cruise-line trips and to invest in the stock
    exchange, life-insurance
  • Don't forget "It's is where the money is!"

28
More facts...
  • In each of European country from 1996, one person
    has reached age 50 every 50 seconds in USA, the
    rate is one every 7 seconds !
  • Rapid ageing of population of economically
    developed countries been apparent for long time.
  • The rhythm of this ageing is speeding up.
  • Between 1990 and 2020, under 50s in Europe, set
    to increase by only 1,
  • over 50s will explode, with growth of more than
    75.

29
Reasons for growth...
  • three reasons for the growth in number of
    over-50s
  • post-war baby boom,
  • decrease in the birth rate
  • growth in life expectancy.
  • majority of ageing countries are industrialised
    countries of Europe, Asia and North America.
  • Oldest country in world is Italy 22.2 of
    population is over 60, closely followed by
    Sweden, Greece, Belgium, Germany, Spain and the
    UK.

30
Never happened before?
  • The improvement in human life expectancy is quite
    incredible.
  • And
  • two-thirds of those who have reached the age of
    65 since the beginning of mankind are living
    today !

31
Purchasing power...
  • In each of the European countries, the purchasing
    power of the over 60s has increased seven times
    over 20 years, more than salaries (sixfold) and
    prices (fivefold).
  • although the old were once thought to be poor,
    now they are not.
  • Although the poor (old and young) may still
    be...

32
Disposable income...
Household disposable income by age group, on
average, in developed countries (all together
100)
33
Life cycle Money
  • The life cycle of the over 50s based on the three
    determining criterias money, health, time
  • MONEY 50-59 YEARS High
    disposal income. 60-74 YEARS
    Maximum disposal income, the golden age of
    consumption. 75-84 YEARS
    Weaker means and appetite for buying (economic
    and psychological).
    85 YEARS Many in precarious state,
    especially widows.

34
HEALTH...
  • HEALTH 50-59 YEARS Vast majority in
    good health. Sight decline. Menopause. 60-
    74 YEARS Still in good health but sight
    continues to decline. Deafness. 75-84
    YEARS Physical problems are accentuated.
    Movements less precise. 85 YEARS
    High level of dependency.

35
TIME
  • TIME 50-59 YEARS Free time, but
    moderate in quality. 60-74 YEARS More
    free time. 75-84 YEARS More free
    time. 85 YEARS More free time but
    can no longer go out.

36
The UK car market - who buys ?
37
Average equipment level ...
38
Any Questions?
  • Taken directly or amended from materials from the
    following websites
  • BBC News UK Edition Ageing population Facts
    behind the fiction
  • http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/if/3493352.
    stm
  • GLOBAL RETIREMENT CRISIS. CSIS Report Pension,
    Health Care Spending Threaten World Stability
  • http//www.csis.org/press/pr02_24.htm
  • Office of National Statistics Pensions and
    pensioners
  • http//www.statistics.gov.uk/CCI/Nscl.asp?ID7822
    Pos1ColRank1Rank64
  • Senioragency International
  • http//www.senioragency.com/
  • http//www.senioragency.com/press_articles/press_
    release1.php
  • http//www.senioragency.com/press_articles/press_
    release2.php
  • http//www.senioragency.com/press_articles/press_
    release3.php
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