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Christopher Ragan Department of Economics McGill University and David Dodge Chair in Monetary Policy C.D. Howe Institute November 2011 Canada’s Looming “Fiscal Squeeze”
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Great stuff that I won’t talk about:
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Outline of Talk 1.The basic demographics of aging 2.The looming “fiscal squeeze” 3.Some non-fiscal solutions? 4.Difficult decisions 3
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A declining fertility rate has reduced the population growth rate... Source: Statistics Canada, medium-growth projection. The 1971 observation is omitted due to a level change in the definition of the series. 4 Current fertility rate ~ 1.6 children per woman
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... which inevitably leads to population aging. Source: Office of the Chief Actuary’s 23rd Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan and Statistics Canada. Distribution of the Population By Sex and Age Group 5
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Aging will markedly reduce the working-age share of the population... Source: Office of the Chief Actuary’s 23rd Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan. Share of people aged 15-64 in Total Population 6
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... and will also cause a shift toward groups with lower LF participation rates … Source: Author’s calculations based on data from Statistics Canada, Labour Force Survey. 7
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… resulting in a reduction in the aggregate labour-force participation rate. Source: Data from 1976-2009, Statistics Canada; projections from 2010-2040, Office of the Chief Actuary (2010), 25 th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan. 8
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Two different directions for this talk: 9 GDP/POP = (GDP/E) x (E/LF) x (LF/POP) Future path of living standards Future fiscal implications Past 40 years Next 40 years Per capita income = (labour productivity) X (employment rate) X (LF participation rate)
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10 Source: Author’s calculations based on data from Statistics Canada.
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The looming “fiscal squeeze”: Part 1 Over the next ~30 years there will be: reduced growth in real per capita GDP (for any given rate of productivity growth) reduced growth in per capita tax base (growth rate will be cut roughly in half!) 11
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1. Need for more public spending: Health-Care Spending Elderly Benefits 2. Offsetting effects expected to be small: Education, children’s benefits and some social services 12 The looming “fiscal squeeze”: Part 2
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Not surprisingly, per capita health-care expenditures rise rapidly as we age... Source: Author’s calculations based on data from Statistics Canada and the Canadian Institute for Health Information. 13
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... but “other factors” will also contribute to rising health-care costs. Source: OECD (2006), Table A2.3, and author’s calculations. FYI: Total public spending on HC increased from 5.4 to 7.5 percent of GDP between 1975 and 2008. 14
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Rising elderly benefits will also put upward pressure on government spending as the population ages. Source: Office of the Chief Actuary (2008), 8th Actuarial Report on the OAS program, and author’s calculations. 15
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2015 2030 2040 0 Change in ppts of GDP “Fiscal Squeeze” T/GDP G/GDP 4.2 An illustration of the fiscal squeeze: 2020
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Some popular non-fiscal solutions? 1.Increase immigration rate? 2.Increase fertility rate? 3.Increase labour-force participation rate? 4.Restrain the growth of health-care spending? 5.Increase the productivity growth rate? 17
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What broad fiscal choices are available? 1.Restrain spending growth - especially on non-age-related items? 2.Increase tax rates (or the “tax burden”) 3.Defer the problem - increase borrowing (public debt) 18
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2015 2030 2040 0 Change in ppts of GDP “Fiscal Squeeze” T/GDP G/GDP 4.2 How much debt? 2020 Area = accumulated debt = 25×4.2×.5 = 52.5
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For Canadian governments, this would mean a return to the “debt wall” of the mid 1990s. Source: Statistics Canada (National Balance Sheet Accounts) and author’s calculations. 20 Debt wall?
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So, some fiscal adjustment will be needed.
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Summary and Final Thoughts 1.A large, two-part “fiscal squeeze” is heading our way. 2.We must adjust in coming years – but we have many choices. 3.This is not about small versus big government – it is about avoiding high public debt. 4.There will be renewed tensions between federal and provincial governments. 5.We need to start talking soon about fiscal priorities! 22
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Thank you. Questions? 24
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