@techreport{e8e5a3e33a3a40e7966f179bef752399,
title = "Contractions in Chinese Fertility and Savings Long Run Domestic and Global Implications",
abstract = "Following three decades of rapid but unbalanced economic growth, China{\textquoteright}s reform and policy agenda are set to rebalance the economy toward consumption while maintaining a rate of GDP growth near seven per cent. Among the headwinds it faces is a demographic contraction that brings slower, and possibly negative, labour force growth and relatively rapid ageing. While the lower saving rates that result from consumption-oriented policies and rising aged dependency may contribute to a rebalancing of the economy, in the long run they will reduce both GDP growth and per capita income. Moreover, while an effective transition from the one-child policy to a two-child policy would help sustain growth and eventually mitigate the aged dependency problem, it would set real per capita income on a still lower path. These conundrums are examined using a global economic and demographic model, which embodies the main channels through which fertility and saving rates impact on economic performance. The results quantify the associated trade-offs and show that continuing demographic and saving contractions in China would alter the trajectory of the global economy as well.",
keywords = "China, demography, global effects, imbalances, spill-overs",
author = "Jane Golley and Rodney Tyers and Yixiao Zhou",
year = "2016",
language = "English",
series = "Economics Discussion Papers",
publisher = "UWA Business School",
number = "8",
address = "Australia",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "UWA Business School",
}