Abstract
The aim of this study is to answer the question of whether improvements in the health of the elderly in European countries could compensate for population ageing on the supply side of the labour market. We propose a state-of-health-specific (additive) decomposition of the old-age dependency ratio into an old-age healthy dependency ratio and an old-age unhealthy dependency ratio in order to participate in a discussion of the significance of changes in population health to compensate for the ageing of the labour force. Applying the proposed indicators to the Eurostat’s population projection for the years 2010–2050, and assuming there will be equal improvements in life expectancy and healthy life expectancy at birth, we discuss various scenarios concerning future of the European labour force. While improvements in population health are anticipated during the years 2010–2050, the growth in the number of elderly people in Europe may be expected to lead to a rise in both healthy and unhealthy dependency ratios. The healthy dependency ratio is, however, projected to make up the greater part of the old-age dependency ratio. In the European countries in 2006, the value of the old-age dependency ratio was 25. But in the year 2050, with a positive migration balance over the years 2010–2050, there would be 18 elderly people in poor health plus 34 in good health per 100 people in the current working age range of 15–64. In the scenarios developed in this study, we demonstrate that improvements in health and progress in preventing disability will not, by themselves, compensate for the ageing of the workforce. However, coupled with a positive migration balance, at the level and with the age structure assumed in the Eurostat’s population projections, these developments could ease the effect of population ageing on the supply side of the European labour market.
Highlights
We introduce an alternative approach to including population health in the debate on the consequences of population ageing by decomposing the old-age dependency ratio into two additive indicators: the oldage unhealthy dependency ratio and the old-age healthy dependency ratio
In addition to showing the old-age dependency ratio (ODR) in selected European countries, the last three columns of Table 1 present its decomposition into the additive components: the old-age unhealthy dependency ratio (UnHODR) and the old-age healthy dependency ratio (HODR); when summed up, the last two numbers are equal to the value of the total old-age dependency ratio
We demonstrated that improvements in health and disability will not compensate for the ageing process on the supply side of the labour market, even though growing numbers of the elderly will still be in good health
Summary
It should be pointed out that Caselli and Vallin (1990) looked at population projections until 2040 for France and Italy, and concluded that changes in mortality will contribute more to the increase in the elderly population than fertility. For this development to last, it is essential that mortality continues to decrease at advanced ages. Even at ages 90 and higher, death rates have been declining at an accelerating pace in recent years (Rau et al 2008) This trend is not restricted to Japan. Based on changes in smoking patterns, some researchers expect mortality in the United States to decline even faster than in the past (Wang and Preston 2009); Janssen and Kunst (2007) have asserted that gains in remaining life expectancy at age 80 in seven European countries will be stronger than are typically anticipated when non-smoking-related mortality is taken as the basis for projections
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