People, Population Change and Policies

People, Population Change and Policies

AngličtinaMěkká vazbaTisk na objednávku
Springer
EAN: 9789400795952
Tisk na objednávku
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Podrobné informace

European countries, including the DIALOG countries, have faced a major de- graphic change and transition in the last thirty years. They are experiencing lo- term downward trends in fertility, leading to demographic ageing. Fertility rates are now below replacement level in nearly all countries. As a result, natural p- ulation growth rates are starting to decline, or population sizes are falling o- right. At the same time, the proportion of elderly dependants continues to grow while the working-age population declines in absolute and relative terms (see Kontula and Miettinen 2005). Moreover, net immigration, which potentially could offset declines in working-age population, remains generally low in most European countries (Grant et al. 2004). There are a great number of societal problems that arise from this demographic transition. The International Monetary Fund (2004) argues that the impact of - coming demographic changes on economical growth could be substantial. The h- toric association between demographicand macro-economicvariablessuggests that the projected increase in elderly dependency ratios and the projected decline in the share of the working-age population could result in slower per capita GDP growth, and lower saving and investment (IMF 2004, 147). For example, the estimates s- gest that demographic change could reduce annual real per capita GDP growth in 1 1 advanced countries by an average of / % point by 2050, i. e. , growth would be / % 2 2 point lower than if the demographic structure had remained the same as in 2000 (IMF 2004, 147).
EAN 9789400795952
ISBN 9400795955
Typ produktu Měkká vazba
Vydavatel Springer
Datum vydání 14. listopadu 2014
Stránky 347
Jazyk English
Rozměry 235 x 155
Země Netherlands
Sekce Professional & Scholarly
Ilustrace XII, 346 p.
Editoři Avramov Dragana; Höhn, Charlotte; Kotowska, Irena E.
Edice 2008 ed.
Série European Studies of Population