Europe's Coming Demographic Challenge
Unlocking the Value of Health

  • Title:

    Europe's Coming Demographic Challenge
  • Format:

    Paperback
  • Paperback Price:

    15.00
  • Paperback ISBN:

    978-0-8447-7200-4
  • Paperback Dimensions:

    5.5'' x 8.5''
  • 70 Paperback pages
  • Buy the Book


Click here to view the press release for Europe's Coming Demographic Challenge

For nearly a generation, economic growth in Western Europe has lagged conspicuously behind the United States. Europe’s population is aging dramatically; the region’s working-age population will peak in just a few years and decline indefinitely thereafter. If Western Europeans wish to remain economically competitive and enjoy continuing improvements in living standards, they must act now to address this looming demographic challenge.

Fortunately, there is one important demographic realm, critical to both productivity and economic competitiveness, where Western Europe may enjoy a comparative advantage: mortality and health. Today, human capital has replaced natural resources as the driving force behind economic growth, and in this regard, Europe is well-positioned. The present generation of Western Europeans aged fifty to seventy-four is more physically robust and mentally alert than any of their predecessors on the continent—indeed, they are better educated and more highly trained than any cohort before them. The promise of “healthy aging” offers significant opportunities for economic growth and development for Europe in the decades ahead—if governments and citizens are willing to grasp them. Throughout Western Europe, perverse economic and social policies are driving older workers away from the labor force. For the region to capitalize upon the potential of a healthy older workforce, it must reverse this pervasive retreat from paid work at older ages.

Europe’s Coming Demographic Challenge: Unlocking the Value of Health examines the region’s demographic challenges, the curious new phenomenon of the “underworked European,” and policies that stand in the way of the region benefiting from its health advantage.

Nicholas Eberstadt is the Henry Wendt Scholar in Political Economy at AEI.

Hans Groth is a Pfizer Global Health Fellow.

About the Author

 

Nicholas
Eberstadt
  • Nicholas Eberstadt, a political economist and a demographer by training, is also a senior adviser to the National Board of Asian Research, a member of the visiting committee at the Harvard School of Public Health, and a member of the Global Leadership Council at the World Economic Forum. He researches and writes extensively on economic development, foreign aid, global health, demographics, and poverty. He is the author of numerous monographs and articles on North and South Korea, East Asia, and countries of the former Soviet Union. His books range from The End of North Korea (AEI Press, 1999) to The Poverty of the Poverty Rate (AEI Press, 2008).

     

  • Phone: 202-862-5825
    Email: eberstadt@aei.org
  • Assistant Info

    Name: Kelly Matush
    Phone: 202-862-5835
    Email: kelly.matush@aei.org
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