Special report | The ageing paradox
Elderly populations mean more government spending
They also mean low interest rates
At the peak of concerns over public debt and deficits in 2010, President Barack Obama created a bipartisan commission charged with putting American fiscal policy on a sound footing. Crucial to this was containing growing spending on health care and pensions as America’s population aged. By 2020 the resultant “Simpson-Bowles” plan aimed to bring America’s debt-to-gdp ratio down to about 66%. Gloomy officials at the Congressional Budget Office (cbo) wrote up an “alternative fiscal scenario” that showed a “clear threat” of a fiscal crisis if corrective actions were not taken. In it, the debt would rise to 95% of gdp in 2022.
This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline “The ageing paradox”