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Old
Europe
by William G. Shipman, Chairman
CarriageOaks Partners LLC |
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During the diplomatic run-up to the
war with Iraq, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld introduced the term
‘Old Europe’ to punctuate the opposition of Germany and France to
the use of force in the impending conflict. In retort, French
government spokesman Jean-Francois Cope offered: “An ‘old’ continent
– a continent somewhat ancient in its historical, cultural,
political, economic traditions – can sometimes be infused with a
certain wisdom, and wisdom can sometimes make for good advice.”
The epithet ‘Old Europe’ has another meaning, one that will be more
determinate of the Continent’s future than any perceived cultural
advantage or inherited wisdom. Europe’s population is aging:
people are living longer, women are having fewer children, and the
number of workers relative to retirees is shrinking. These trends
will cause their Social Security systems and more generally the
welfare state—part of Europe’s DNA—to collapse. Old Europe, as we
know it, is dying.
The beginnings of the welfare state were introduced by Germany’s
Chancellor Otto von Bismarck in 1889 when he adopted what is now
called Social Security. Over the following years and decades many
other nations, including the United States, followed his lead by
also offering government benefits in large part to replace income
lost to old age, disability, sickness, death, work injury and the
like. As time progressed the benefits became significant as did
their costs.
In most cases these benefits are financed with a payroll tax, using
what is often referred to as pay-as-you-go financing. In such
systems benefits for today’s elderly are paid by taxing today’s
young. And benefits to be paid to today’s young will be financed by
taxing tomorrow’s young. This system is a simple transfer of wealth
from young workers to older retirees. There is no saving or
investment of resources for future economic growth.
For both taxes and benefits to remain reasonable, for the financial
structure to remain stable, it is necessary that there always be
many workers to tax relative to those who are benefit-eligible.
This ratio of workers to beneficiaries is determined mainly by two
variables: life expectancy and the birth rate. In Old Europe both
are moving in a direction that upsets this stability.
Throughout the Continent people are living longer. This is a result
of, amongst other variables, better living and working conditions,
better nutrition and health systems and greater wealth. According
to the United Nations, life expectancy at birth in Germany, France
and Italy is about 78 years of age; in the 1950s it was about 67.
And throughout much of Europe families are having fewer children.
The birth rate that ultimately stabilizes a population is called
zero population growth or ZPG for short. It is about 2.1 births per
woman of child-bearing age. Forty years ago most of Europe
experienced birth rates well above ZPG. No more. Today, the birth
rates are for France – 1.7, Germany – 1.4, Italy – 1.2 and Spain –
1.16, the lowest ever recorded for the human race. As has been
reported before, “there is no single country in Europe where people
are having enough children to replace themselves when they die.”
The combination of rising life expectancy and falling birth rates
results in a fall of workers relative to benefit-eligible retirees.
According to the IMF the ratio of contributors to retired
beneficiaries in 1995 for France and Germany was 2.5 and 2.3,
respectively. They have been on a steady decline and over the next
5 decades they are expected to drop to 1.4 and 1.2.
The political response to such a demographic squeeze has often been
an increase in the payroll tax rate on the shrinking—relatively,
that is—workforce. In the United States, for example, the employee
and employer combined Social Security tax in 1950, when there were
16 workers per beneficiary, was 3 percent on a wage limit of
$3,000. This year, with only 3.3 workers per beneficiary, it is
12.4 percent on $87,000. The maximum tax has jumped from $90 to
$10,788. By European standards, however, it is low. The payroll
tax in France is 49.3 percent, Germany is 40.9 percent, Italy and
Spain are 42.5 and 37.8 percent, respectively. And unlike the
United States, in many cases, but not all, the tax applies to all
earnings. Yet, these numbers actually understate the burden placed
on European workers for in each country the payroll tax revenue is
not enough to finance benefits. Additional taxes are levied to make
up the difference.
For many western European countries the shortfall of prospective
taxes to benefits, the result of demographics, is greater in present
value terms than the total value of government bonds outstanding in
each country. Government debt including unfunded pension
liabilities in some cases is multiples of commonly measured
sovereign debt.
How ‘Old Europe’ deals with these realities will largely determine
its destiny. The elderly are absolutely dependent on institutions
that are fundamentally, and demographically, unsound. The tax
burden on workers is prohibitive causing avoidance in many forms
including earlier retirement which further stresses the system.
Europe’s economies and institutions are at risk. And yet, part of
Europe’s culture, the welfare state broadly defined, is a hard-wired
reality of the region. Something will have to give.
Secretary Rumsfeld’s characterization, ‘Old Europe,’ raised the ire
of some of our European partners who responded that Europe’s long
history gave it a wisdom that a relatively young United States could
not yet have acquired. Maybe so. If that is the case, it will need
to harness that wisdom to solve an extraordinary challenge that it
can no longer avoid.
William Shipman
Biography
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