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Long-Term Budget Projections: Can They Help Governments Address The Ageing Problem?

Long-Term Budget Projections: Can They Help Governments Address The Ageing Problem?. Presentation by Barry Anderson At the 2006 Meeting of the OECD Asia Senior Budget Officials Network Bangkok, Thailand December 14-15, 2006. Outline. Goals of Presentation Why do long-term projections?

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Long-Term Budget Projections: Can They Help Governments Address The Ageing Problem?

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  1. Long-Term Budget Projections:Can They Help GovernmentsAddress The Ageing Problem? Presentation by Barry Anderson At the 2006 Meeting of the OECD Asia Senior Budget Officials Network Bangkok, Thailand December 14-15, 2006

  2. Outline • Goals of Presentation • Why do long-term projections? • How are long-term projections prepared? • How can long-term projections be used? • An example of the use of long-term projections

  3. Goals of Presentation • Increase your awareness of long-term budget projections as a mechanism to assess fiscal risks • Describe how long-term projections are made • Describe how long-term projections can be used • Provide and discuss an example of their use This presentation is based on OECD’s recent paper: “Assessing Fiscal Risks Through Long-Term Budget Projections” by Paal Ulla, which was presented at the 27th Annual Meeting of Senior Budget Officials held in June 2006 in Sydney.

  4. Why Do Long-Term Projections? • Addresses fiscal sustainability by identifying the long-term fiscal consequences of near-term political decisions • Promotes transparency by forcing the estimation of the costs and consequences of policy actions • Better quantifies significant fiscal risks—and thus helps plan for funding core functions—through use of sensitivity analysis • Allows for analyses of contingent liabilities and the potential costs of natural disasters • Most of all, unlike generational accounting & balance sheet analysis, it is relatively easy to understand & use

  5. How are long-term projections prepared? • Demographics • Economics • Current policy baseline • Spending • Age related • Other mandatory • Discretionary • Contingent liabilities • Revenues • Debt service

  6. Demographic Projections • The most important are: • Life expectancy • Fertility rates • Net immigration • But demographic factors usually don’t change quickly, and immigration changes have to be huge to have much of an influence

  7. Economic Projections • The most important are: • Productivity • Labour market participation • Interest rates • As the future is unknowable, sensitivity analysis is particularly valuable • Use of past trends as possible indicators of the future can also be instructive

  8. Current Policy Baseline • A good starting point in that it permits displaying the potential costs of proposed legislation • Assumes current policies/laws are in place until/unless they expire under law • The major exception to this unchanged policy baseline is revenues—see below

  9. Age Related Spending • Public pensions • Health • Long-term care • Education • Unemployment

  10. Other Spending Categories • Other mandatory • Usually done as a percentage of GDP • Discretionary • Usually done as a percentage of GDP • Contingent liabilities • Credit, especially insurance & loan guarantees • Government-owned enterprises • Public-Private Partnerships • Fiscal consequences of natural disasters

  11. Revenues • The unchanged policy scenario can be unrealistic here. • Even if kept constant in real terms, real growth over the long run would eventually push the entire population to paying income taxes at the highest marginal rate. • So, an option is to keep the overall tax rate constant on household income.

  12. Debt Service • Base is determined by above calculations • Strongly influenced by interest rates

  13. How can long-term projections be used? • Sensitivity analyses on, for example: • Life expectancy • Immigration rates • Productivity growth • Size if the labour force • Pension reforms • Health care expenditures • Interest rates • Medium-term objectives

  14. Examples of the Time Frames Covered in Long-Term Projections

  15. An Example of the Use of Long-Term Projections • Based on a Special Policy Briefing before the Lisbon Council on the “Sustainability of Public Finances” by Joaquin Almunia, EC Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs, Brussels, October 9, 2006. (http://www.lisboncouncil.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=32&Itemid=&lang=en) • See also “The Long-Term Sustainability of Public Finance in the European Union”, a report by the European Commission Services, October, 2006. (http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/publications/european_economy/2006/ee0406sustainability_en.htm)

  16. Population Pyramids for EU2520042050

  17. Population Pyramid Summary for the UNITED STATES, 2004 & 2050

  18. Population Pyramid Summary for AUSTRALIA, 2004 & 2050

  19. Population Pyramid Summary for JAPAN, 2004 & 2050

  20. Population Pyramid Summary for THAILAND, 2004 & 2050

  21. Population Pyramid Summary for KOREA, 2004 & 2050

  22. Population Pyramid Summary for SINGAPORE, 2004 & 2050

  23. Population Pyramid Summary for INDIA, 2004 & 2050

  24. Population Pyramid Summary for CHINA, 2004 & 2050

  25. The EU Sustainability Gap* = 2¼% of GDP(*the gap between the structural budgetary position in 2005 and the 60% reference value used by the EC)

  26. Impact of Changes in Assumptions on the Sustainability Gap for the EU

  27. Employment Rates Projected to Increase in the EU

  28. The Cost of Delay in Implementing Structural Government Balance by 2010

  29. Average Exit Age from the Labour Market in 2004

  30. The Benefits of Implementing Balance Budgets (MTO Scenario) by 2010

  31. Commissioner Almunia’s 3-prongedStrategy to Ensure Sustainability

  32. Commissioner Almunia’s Conclusions • “The status quo is not sustainable and therefore not an option.” • More movement towards structural balance in needed. • “Growth potential needs to be improved by raising productivity and employment and this means that Europe’s social models have to be adapted.” • “Structural reforms, notably in pensions, should improve government finances over the long-term and make Europe’s social models more sustainable.” • “Implementing the Lisbon strategy by fostering productivity, employment creation and adaptability of the economies is paramount, as it is the best way to increase economic growth and prosperity and contributes to fiscal sustainability.” • The “challenge is considerable, but manageable.” This is supported by the progress towards sustainability made by countries who have cut deficits and reformed pension systems. • “Our future is in our hands.”

  33. My Observations • There are no easy answers. • Higher growth alone is not sufficient. • Higher productivity alone is not sufficient. • Higher population or labour force growth alone is notsufficient—and mechanisms to induce greater labour force participation are not cheap or easy. • Higher taxes and/or higher debt can have serious detrimental effects. • Thus, benefit cuts must be part of a solution. • The sooner a country begins, the easier it will be. For example, the best way to prevent firing public employees in the future is not to hire them today. • Incorporating long-term projections into the annual budget process is worthwhile.

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