chapter title: population aging and economic growth in asia DE Bloom,D Canning,JE Finlay 被引量: 0发表: 2017年 Comment on "Population Aging and Economic Growth in Asia" No abstract is available for this item. RS Mariano - 《Journal of the American College of Cardiology》 被引量: 0发表:...
economic growthpopulation agingWe study the effects of projected population aging on potential growth in Asian economies over the period 2015–2050.We find that an increase in the share of the population over 64 years of age will significantly lower output growth through decreased labor parti...
Population aging, intergenerational transfers and economic growth: Latin America in a Global Context Mason (2012): "Population Aging, Intergenerational Transfers, and Economic Growth: Asia in a Global Context," in Aging in Asia: Findings From New and Emerging Data Initiatives, James P. Smith and ...
Population aging has been a significant social problem for developed countries, and prospectively for developing countries. This paper verifies the impact of population aging on economic growth based on the multinational panel dataset of 34 OECD countries and BRIC countries from 1980 to 2010. The resu...
Population aging in the People’s Republic of China (PRC) is mainly due to rapid fertility decline after 1970, a third of which was due to government policy, and the balance to social and economic development. Relaxing fertility policies now would probably not have a large effect on fertility...
Using the Solow growth theory and a modified Cobb-Douglas production function which contains human capital,this paper analyzes the impact of population aging and population growth on economic growth.Theoretical analysis shows that both population aging and population growth have negative influence on econo...
"Impact of Population Aging on Asia's Future Growth," In Park, D., Lee, S-H. and A. Mason. (eds.) Aging, Economic Growth, and Old-Age Security in Asia. Phil- ippines: Asian Development BankPark, D. and Kwanho, S. (2011), Impact of Population Aging on Asia's Future Growth....
Rising longevity has led to population aging in developed countries, causing increasing concerns about its economic impact. Specially, the trend of population aging increases health expenditure in developed countries, and 70% to 80% of health expenditure is funded by public sector. Therefore, this pa...
"Asia-Pacific is now the fastest aging region in the world, which is alarming. We need to foster future productivity growth, training and retraining of workers to avert labor shortage," said Ken Chamuva Shawa, senior economist at ILO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific. ...
Improvements in the productivity of each worker--fostered by investment in child health and education--can help maintain economic growth even as the working-age population shrinks relative to the elderly. The sheer speed and scale of population aging in Asia add a sense of urgency as policymakers...