In a study of 14 Asian
countries, all but two (Japan and Australia) had high fertility of between five
and eight births per woman in the early 1950s. By 2005–10, only two countries,
the Philippines and Pakistan, had a fertility rate above three and, in both
these cases, fertility was trending downwards strongly. Evidently, the campaign
to reduce fertility rates in Asia has been remarkably successful.
Yet the speed and timing of
the decline in fertility has varied across countries. In India, for example,
the decline started in the early 1960s but has proceeded slowly. In contrast,
the decline in Iran started in the mid-1980s but was spectacularly fast.
Generally, the falls in the Southeast Asian countries proceeded more slowly
than in the East Asian countries with Thailand being on the faster end and the
Philippines on the slower end. In Pakistan, fertility did not start falling
until the 1990s, but has declined strongly since.
In five of the countries
studied (Japan, South Korea, China, Singapore and Thailand), the fertility rate
is now very low at under 1.5 births per woman. Combined with previously high
fertility rates, this will produce large increases in the proportion of
population at older ages.
Increases in life expectancy
have also been spectacular. Life expectancy at birth exceeded 65 years in only
one of the countries (Australia) in 1950–55, but it did so in all 14 countries
by 2005–10.
As life expectancy rises,
countries are facing substantial increases in the demand for aged care and
health services and income support for elderly people. Australia and Japan have
had many years to develop policies and programs to address these challenges.
Singapore has policies for an ageing population in place, but still also faces
a significant problem because of its very low fertility rate. For the other 11
countries, aged care and income support policies are, at best, in an embryonic
state and health systems are not well prepared.
As populations in Asia age
rapidly, numbers entering the labour force will be declining. This will be a greater problem for
those countries that have experienced rapid and substantial fertility decline
compared to those where the decline was more gradual.
The trends in labour supply
can be seen by looking at the ratio of the projected number of persons aged
15–24 years in 2050 compared to the number in the same age group in 2010. For
China, this ratio is 0.57 meaning that the number aged 15–24 in 2050 (139
million) will be 43 per cent lower than the number in 2010 (242 million), a
fall of over 100 million in the labour force entry ages. In 2050, the numbers
aged 70–74 in China will be larger
than in any other age group and the numbers taper down across all the labour
force ages. So, not only will the labour force in China be much smaller, it
will also be much older.
Immigration cannot be a
solution to these labour shortages given that China’s population base is so
large. China will likely have to look to investment in other countries that
will have large labour supplies (India, Indonesia or several Sub-Saharan
African countries).
For seven of the 14
countries, the fall in the size of the labour force entry age group is more
than 80 per cent with the falls in Thailand and Vietnam being similar to that
of China.
The fall is not as large in
Japan. Still, the labour force will fall year upon year and will age further in
coming years. The challenges ahead for the Japanese economy are probably
greater than has been the case in the past two decades.
In India and Indonesia, the
number of persons aged 15–24 years in 2050 will be roughly the same as in 2010.
Provided their young people are well educated, India and Indonesia should have
a labour supply advantage over the next 40 years. In the Philippines, the
population aged 15–24 in 2050 will be 35 per cent larger than in 2010. We can
expect the Philippines to continue to be a major supplier of labour around the
globe.
Finally, with a 44 per cent
increase in the population aged 15–24 over the years from 2010 to 2050,
Australia stands out as a country with a growing supply of young workers. This
is because its fertility rate has continued to remain close to the replacement
level and because of its sustained immigration program.
A number of countries
(Australia, Malaysia, India, Bangladesh, Indonesia and the Philippines) are
projected to have a ‘beehive’ shaped age structure by 2060. This is generally
considered to be a favourable age structure with a relatively high concentration
in the working ages. The issues for these countries will be more economic than
demographic with a strong need to improve labour productivity through education
and training.
India and Pakistan will have
huge growth in the working age population from 2010 to 2060, and growth in the
labour supply will easily compensate for the combined falls in labour force in
the advanced countries of Asia and Europe. Out-sourcing of jobs to South Asia
will be a growing feature of 21st century Asian economies.
Peter McDonald is professor
of demography at the Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National
University.
An extended version of this
article was published in the most recent edition of the East Asia Forum Quarterly, ‘Asia’s Intergenerational
Challenges‘.
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