The Census Bureau just released a report on America’s aging population.
The big takeaway is that our population will be getting much older between now and 2050.
And since I’m a baby boomer, I very much like the fact that we’re expected to live longer.
But as a public finance economist, I’m not nearly as happy.
As I explain in this interview with the Wall Street Journal’s Digital Network (and as confirmed by BIS, OECD, and IMF data), the United States is going to get deluged by a tsunami of entitlement spending.
I mentioned that it’s important to focus on the ratio of workers to retirees. This “dependency ratio” matters because economic output largely is a function of an economy’s working-age population.
To cite my famous cartoons, you need a sufficient number of people pulling the wagon to support those riding in the wagon.
Here’s a chart from the Census report to help you understand the magnitude of the problem. As you can see, both in the United States and other nations, the increase in the dependency ratio is almost entirely the result of aging populations.
This is why I said that we face a slow-motion train wreck because of poorly designed entitlement programs.
But the good news is that there is time to reform those programs and avert a crisis.
Which explains why I probably sound like a broken record about the need forgenuine entitlement reform.
In a column citing the new private pension system in the Faroe Islands, I gave the arguments for modernizing Social Security with personal retirement accounts.
But we also need to deal with the health entitlements.
Here’s how to fix Medicare.
And here’s how to fix Medicaid.
By the way, some of the damaging provisions of Obamacare can be de facto repealed by including them in the Medicaid block grant, so it’s a critically important reform.
Needless to say, I think these reforms are far better for the economy than thebig tax hike Obama has endorsed to deal with the giant financing gap.
P.S. For a clever look at the worker-dependency ratio, check out the party shipproduced by a Danish think tank.
P.P.S. The interviewer also mentioned that America’s racial composition is changing, which gives me an excuse to point out that Social Security reform isparticularly beneficial for blacks because of differences in life expectancy.