Demography -- the fundamental driver of all economies -- is shifting the balance of power in Asia, according to Deloitte's Voice of Asia report:
By 2042 there will be more over-65s in Asia than the populations of the Eurozone and North America combined.
This will provide a target-rich environment of business opportunities, focused on a growth cluster targeting megatrends such as rising life expectancies, increasing relative health care costs, and tightening public sector budgets.
India will rise as an economic superpower, supplying more than half of the increase in Asia's potential workforce over the coming decade.
Asia's over 65s are the largest and fastest growing market in the world, providing a target-rich environment of business opportunities, according to Deloitte, who today released the third edition of their Voice of Asia series. Those in Asia aged over 65 will grow from 365 million in 2017 to more than 520 million in 2027. While this creates emerging challenges for ageing nations, ageing populations will also generate a growth cluster of new business opportunities.
"Ageing populations may well be challenging to some nations, but they will also present some incredible business opportunities within those same nations. Our analysis shows that ageing will produce some very large winners at the industry level, particularly in Asia," said Chris Richardson, Deloitte Australia Economist.
Ageing to create a growth cluster of industry winners Three big accelerators drive the industry opportunities in an ageing Asia, with each building on the other:
Asia is ageing fast, with a billion people in the region to be aged 65 and over by the middle of this century.
And the money being spent by and on ageing populations will grow even faster than Asia ages, because the impact of new technologies and the on-going management of increasing chronic conditions means health care costs will rise faster than most other costs.
Finally, private sector opportunities will grow even faster still, because stretched government budgets mean the share of health-related costs borne by taxpayers is likely to decrease in the decades ahead.
Sitao Xu, chief economist, Deloitte China, notes that, "China and Hong Kong can learn from the experience in Japan, where rapid ageing in the population has changed the needs of people and the way businesses satisfy them. In Hong Kong, life expectancy is at 84 years, which is higher than many developed countries, yet health care expenditure is still quite low, accounting for just 5.7 percent of GDP. There will be increasing demand in the health care industry, and as Government spending continues to be tightened, much of this demand will be addressed by the private sector. Additional growth will be seen in consumer goods for the elderly, age-appropriate housing and social infrastructure, as well as asset management and insurance."
India's rise as an economic superpower Some nations will be well positioned to take greater advantage of these demographic opportunities. In particular, India is set to rise as an economic superpower, driven in part by demographic changes. Following the rise of Japan and then China in decades past, India will drive the third great wave of Asia's growth. Its potential workforce is set to rise from 885 million people today to 1.08 billion people in the next twenty years, and it will remain above a billion people for half a century.
Anis Chakravarty, Deloitte India Economist explained that, "India will account for more than half of the increase in Asia's workforce in the coming decade, but this isn't just a story of more workers: these new workers will be much better trained and educated than the existing Indian workforce, and there will be rising economic potential coming alongside that, thanks to an increased share of women in the workforce, as well as an increased ability and interest in working for longer. The consequences for businesses are huge."
While the coming 'Indian summer' will last decades and have the largest impact on the world, India isn't the only Asian economy set to surge. Indonesia and the Philippines have relatively young populations, meaning they'll experience similar growth.
How countries can minimise the impact of ageing Ageing isn't a new issue: Japan is already dealing with a rapidly ageing population and its implications aren't fully determined. Even India's projected growth isn't guaranteed. It needs the right institutional set-up to promote and sustain its growth, otherwise its rising population could cause increasing unemployment and consequent social unrest.
Sitao Xu, Deloitte China Economist, notes that, "As China's population is ten times that of Japan, and given that China doesn't yet have a sound social security system, there's a chance that ageing could lead to a lower saving rate and a higher inflation rate, declining growth, a worsening government budget deficit, and pressure on its property and financial markets. To mitigate the negative impacts of demographic trends, China needs to implement policy remedies to raise productivity and performance, in addition to financial liberalization. For example, increasing the age of retirement and addressing the challenges faced by the largely disadvantaged migrant worker population who have flocked to Chinese cities."
Retirement ages can rise: Fewer jobs are labour-intensive these days, while rising life expectancies are encouraging longer working lives, and today's higher incomes are also encouraging people to work for longer. Fostering these trends can help the economic growth of those nations at the forefront of ageing impacts -- as is especially true of Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, Korea and China.
More women in the workforce: Asia has far fewer women than men in its paid workforce. Accessing that untapped people power is a direct lever with which ageing nations can boost their growth potential.
Welcome migrants: 2017 is a year in which the politics of migration remains contentious, but the economics of migration remain excellent. Those nations at risk of a demographic-driven growth slowdown should open further to immigration. Accepting young, high-skilled migrants can help ward off ageing impacts on growth, but the critical issue is whether policy -- and property prices -- will allow this immigration to happen at sufficient scale.
Increase productivity: Productivity is just as much a contributor to economic outcomes as demographics. Governments can focus on education and re-skilling the workforce as a way to bolster the growth opportunities offered by new technologies.
An ageing Asia will rewrite the playbook of businesses in Asia and around the globe -- generating new opportunities by geography, such as India, Indonesia and the Philippines, and by industry, not just in health care, but also more widely.
More analysis and details on Voice of Asia can be found here.
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