Growing Pains [electronic resource] / Lorenzo U Figliuoli.

By: Figliuoli, Lorenzo UContributor(s): Flamini, Valentina | Freudenberg, Christoph | Galdamez, Misael | Lambert, Frederic | Li, Mike | Lissovolik, Bogdan | Mowatt, Rosalind | Orthofer, Anna | Puig, Jaume | Soto, Mauricio | Thomas, SajiMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Departmental Papers / Policy Papers; Departmental Paper ; No. 18/05Publication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2018Description: 1 online resource (195 p.)ISBN: 1484326105 :Subject(s): Demographic Trends And Forecasts | Forecasts Of Budgets, Deficits, And Debt | General | Government Expenditures And Health | Public HealthAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: Growing PainsOnline resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: This paper estimates the fiscal costs of population aging in Latin America and provides policy recommendations on reforms needed to make these costs manageable. Although Latin American societies are still younger than most advanced economies, like other emerging markets the region is already in a process of population aging that is expected to accelerate in the remainder of the century. This will directly affect fiscal sustainability by putting pressure on public pension and health care systems in the region that are already more burdened than, for example, in emerging Asia, a region with a similar demographic structure. A stylized cross-country exercise, drawing on demographic projections from the United Nations and methodologies developed by the IMF to derive public spending projections, is used to quantify long-term fiscal gaps generated by population aging in 18 Latin American countries. Several aspects of current pensions and health care systems in Latin Amer-ica make the region's long-term fiscal positions particularly vulnerable to population aging.
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This paper estimates the fiscal costs of population aging in Latin America and provides policy recommendations on reforms needed to make these costs manageable. Although Latin American societies are still younger than most advanced economies, like other emerging markets the region is already in a process of population aging that is expected to accelerate in the remainder of the century. This will directly affect fiscal sustainability by putting pressure on public pension and health care systems in the region that are already more burdened than, for example, in emerging Asia, a region with a similar demographic structure. A stylized cross-country exercise, drawing on demographic projections from the United Nations and methodologies developed by the IMF to derive public spending projections, is used to quantify long-term fiscal gaps generated by population aging in 18 Latin American countries. Several aspects of current pensions and health care systems in Latin Amer-ica make the region's long-term fiscal positions particularly vulnerable to population aging.

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