Publications /
Opinion

Back
The Rich World’s Immigration Conundrum
Authors
Eduardo de Carvalho Andrade
July 31, 2024

This paper was originally published in Project Syndicate
 

Fourteen high-income countries have shown how immigration can help offset declining fertility rates and maintain population levels. But with anti-immigrant sentiment on the rise, politicians in these countries face a difficult choice: welcoming foreigners or facing the economic challenges brought about by an aging population.

WASHINGTON, DC – Populations around the world are aging, as mortality and fertility rates fall. While increased longevity represents a remarkable achievement of modern medicine and public health, the steep decline in fertility over the past decades is cause for concern.The collapse in birth rates can be attributed to powerful structural factors – such as urbanization, education gains, and women’s increased participation in the labor market – as well as the perception that childbearing is more manageable with a smaller number of children. As a result, governments’ efforts to reverse the trend have fallen short.

Countries with falling fertility rates eventually reach a demographic tipping point, though, as our recent research shows, and the pace at which different countries are approaching this threshold varies significantly. We divided the world into three groups. The first includes 52 countries – 41 in Africa, ten in Asia, and Papua New Guinea in Oceania – where the fertility rate is still higher than 2.9 children per woman. Projections suggest that the populations of these countries – almost all of which are low or lower-middle income, with the notable exception of Israel – will continue to grow until the end of the century.

The second group comprises 94 countries – located on all continents and covering all income groups – where the population is already falling, such as in Italy and Japan, or is expected to decline at some point this century. Sixty-four of these countries already have fertility rates below the replacement level of 2.1 children per woman, and the others are moving toward this threshold. To date, no government has reversed the trend of falling births after this threshold has been passed.

But it is not all doom and gloom. The third group, comprising 14 high-income countries, demonstrates that immigration can help offset declining fertility rates and maintain population levels. Foreigners account for more than 10% of the population in all of these countries – including the United States, Canada, and Australia – with just one exception (the Czech Republic). Even though deaths will outnumber births in these countries, their populations may continue to grow for some time, given their ability to attract immigrants.

The aging of a country’s population brings two economic challenges. The first is what we call the geriatric fiscal trap. Given that most social security systems pay pre-defined benefits to retirees, spending on pensions tends to outpace contributions as the working-age share of a population falls. Public spending on health also usually grows as a proportion of GDP.

To reduce this fiscal imbalance, policymakers will be driven to increase taxes, especially as elderly voters become a potent political force. With less disposable income, the younger generation is likely to have fewer children, reducing the future tax base and causing the fiscal situation to deteriorate further.

The second challenge is declining productivity. The people advancing scientific knowledge, including inventors and Nobel Prize winners, and the successful entrepreneurs implementing these ideas in the marketplace are generally under the age of 50. Unless we learn how to increase the fluid intelligence of older adults, allowing them to think creatively and solve new problems, population aging could reduce the pace of innovation, resulting in lower productivity and economic growth.

One could imagine new technological advancements, such as artificial intelligence, leading to the development of machines that would enhance and augment human ingenuity. Nonetheless, immigration currently offers the best defense against a graying society; already, it has been a boon for rich countries that are able – and willing – to welcome foreigners. Despite the dire headlines about increased refugee flows and illegal border crossings, our research has shown that immigration contributes to increased economic growth in destination countries, partly by lessening the burden of an aging population.

In the US, for example, the foreign-born population has higher average schooling levels than its native-born population (undoubtedly contributing to the brain drain in their countries of origin). Moreover, the US economy’s extraordinary performance over the past two years would not have been possible without the post-pandemic immigration uptake.

Anti-immigrant sentiment has been on the rise in many rich countries, improving the electoral prospects of far-right parties in Europe and potentially becoming a decisive factor in the US presidential election this November. This poses a conundrum for politicians. They must convince their voters that facilitating immigration benefits all – or risk facing the economic challenges brought about by an aging population.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Ana Maria Bonomi Barufi 
    October 21, 2017
    Location decisions of firms and workers shape the spatial distribution of economic activity between and within cities. On one hand, the interaction between cities is widely investigated in the literature of regional and urban economics, which tries to assess the extent to which urban scale affects the local concentration of different skills, sectors, etc., apart from defining each city's role in the regional system. On the other hand, within-city dynamics and internal heterogeneity ...
  • July 5, 2017
    The global unemployment rate is expected to remain stable this year at about 5.7 percent and then decline in the coming years. The total number of people unemployed around the globe will remain at about 175 million this year. Unemployment rates are expected to decline in most advanced economies, but expected to be higher this year (compared to last year) in many emerging markets. Venezuela’s unemployment rate is expected to increase by 4 percentage points between 2016 and 2017, with ...
  • Authors
    June 16, 2016
    L’écart entre filles et garçons en termes de scolarisation, au Maroc, a longtemps préoccupé tant les académiciens que les décideurs. En revanche, très peu d’études se sont penchées sur l’analyse de cet écart sous une toile de fond quantitative. Ce présent travail s’intéresse à l’écart genre en termes d’acquis scolaires en lecture. La finalité étant de mettre en exergue les facteurs influençant les différences de performance entre les genres ainsi que leur ampleur. Pour ce faire, une ...
  • Authors
    May 20, 2016
    The 2015-2030 strategic vision innovates the Moroccan educational system. Unlike previous reforms, this vision addresses problems that have long been ignored. Among these problems is the quality of education. Although educational quality may have been included in previous reform programs, it is considered as one of the priorities in this new vision. The purpose of this Policy Brief is to assess the status of learning achievement, which is an integral part of educational quality, of ...
  • January 27, 2016
    This podcast is performed by Prakash Loungani. He is Senior Fellow at Policy Center for the New South and Advisor in the Research Department of the International Monetary Fund, was interv ...
  • Authors
    December 8, 2015
    Trade negotiators rarely get to celebrate a victory. The United States, for example, has been negotiating over 15 bilateral free trade agreements, with none concluded since the Korea-US agreement was finalized at the end of 2010. This makes the recently finalized Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)agreement between the United States and 11 other countries all the more remarkable. But the TPP still faces major hurdles, not least a divisive ratification debate in the U.S. Congress, which ...
  • Authors
    October 2, 2015
    Récemment parue parmi la série de Policy Briefs publiés par OCP Policy Center, une étude réalisée conjointement par Prakash Loungani et Saurabh Mishra a mis l’accent sur la réaction du chômage et l’emploi par rapport à la croissance économique dans les pays du G-20. L’objectif est de quantifier l’apport d’un point supplémentaire de croissance sur l’évolution du taux d’emploi, et sur le taux du chômage sur la période 1980-2014.  Sur la période 1980-2007, les résultats indiquent que ...