Have sex, please or work until you鈥檙e 90

IN HER NOVEL, Scattered All Over the Earth, Yoko Tawada imagines a world in which Japan has physically vanished and Japanese-ness survives only with a handful of natives and Japanophiles. While the archipelago isn鈥檛 likely to disappear (if it did, a lot of us would, too, in the seismological cataclysm), the demographic equivalent isn鈥檛 too farfetched 鈥 not only for Japan but other countries in East Asia. The population of the Land of the Rising Sun is sinking rapidly and, by the turn of the next century, will shrink to about 75 million people from the current 121 million. China has already lost the title of most populous nation to India and will decline from 1.46 billion now to 780 million by 2100. South Korea? It鈥檚 now a little over 50 million people; in 77 years, the projections have the country at under 20 million. (In contrast, its bellicose rival North Korea will roughly maintain its population and have 2 million more people than the South by 2100).
In a column this week, Shuli Ren Hong Kong has come to the conclusion that to populate three artificial islands plus an enormous housing project it is spending as much as $128 billion on, it needs, well, population. Indeed, its demographics will decline precipitously from more than 8 million to 1.3 million in 2100. 鈥淔or the next three years, the government will hand out HK$20,000 ($2,556) 鈥 the price for a dim sum banquet on the classy side 鈥 in cash for each baby born to a parent who is a permanent resident,鈥 she writes. 鈥淭hose who want to seek assisted reproductive services, such as in-vitro fertilization treatments, can receive a tax allowance of up to HK$100,000.鈥 As Shuli says, it is a desperate attempt by the government to justify expensive infrastructure projects that no longer make economic sense.
Japan, in the meantime, has run out of workers. 鈥淥ver half of the country鈥檚 businesses say they can鈥檛 find enough full-time staff,鈥 Gearoid Reidy. One in 10 people in Japan is now over 80 and octogenarians may soon be filling jobs like taxi driving if a rule change takes place. There鈥檚 very little slack in the labor market, 鈥淣early 87% of the working-age populace is employed, well above the 79% average of countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation & Development,鈥 says Gearoid. Next year could bring another crunch: That鈥檚 when new regulations will kick in limiting overtime in the trucking industry. 鈥淓stimates say it could result in a 14% drop in transportable cargo by 2025, ballooning to 34% by 2030.鈥
Automation can probably help Japan and Hong Kong (and China and South Korea) in terms of productivity and manufacturing efficiencies. But robots aren鈥檛 consumers 鈥 and economies focused on perpetual growth will cease to expand if there are dramatically fewer people around to buy things. Perhaps it鈥檚 time to retarget economic efforts on rather than ever-greater largesse.
Relaxing barriers to immigration could help keep the old growth models going, but that will require cultural adjustments from reflexively xenophobic countries. If these nations come around to it, there are rescuers at hand. The population of the Philippines is projected to practically double by 2100. We Filipinos aren鈥檛 robots 鈥 and we like to travel.
IT鈥橲 NOT JUST ASIA …
Rishi Sunak鈥檚 days as UK prime minister appear to be numbered, whether or not he survives the plots his fellow Tories are fomenting against him. As Adrian Wooldridge this week: 鈥淭he disintegration of the Conservative Party is happening faster than the Conservatives feared and Labor dared hope.鈥 Labor Party leader Keir Starmer has already started to issue promises about what his prospective government will do to build Britain better 鈥 including build more housing. The trouble with that, Matthew Brooker, is: With what workers? He writes: 鈥淐onstruction is in the midst of a yearslong labor crisis. The industry鈥檚 workforce is smaller than it was in 2007, while the shortfall of housing has accumulated since then.鈥 What remains of the industry鈥檚 supply of workers is also aging fast.
Matthew says: 鈥淭he proportion of work done by over-50s has risen, from about a quarter of total hours worked in 2007 to 33% as of 2021, government data show. The amount performed by the youngest, from 16 to 29 years old, dropped over the same period. If you were designing a workforce to take on a future of significantly scaled-up housing construction, you wouldn鈥檛 start from here.鈥
While the UK鈥檚 population isn鈥檛 shrinking, it also isn鈥檛 growing particularly fast. A contributing factor to the laborer deficit is, of course, Brexit and its concomitant curtailment of workers from the EU. There鈥檚 no way Starmer can say 鈥渘ever mind鈥 about the divorce.听 That ship has sailed.
TELLTALE CHARTS
鈥淭he Big Four of Indian offshoring giants 鈥 Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., Infosys Ltd., Wipro Ltd. and HCL Technologies Ltd. 鈥 have hired half a million engineering graduates in the past three years. Two of the companies have indicated they won鈥檛 be going to campuses this year, according to an article in the Mint. This is a big blow. It seems, the industry is mimicking its clients by employing generative artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT to boost productivity. If AI is going to permanently reduce the number of entry-level programming jobs in an average year, then youngsters need to pick up other skills to improve their chances. It鈥檚 better to let them know when they鈥檙e yet to hit the job market.鈥 鈥 Andy Mukherjee in 鈥溾
鈥淭he increasing presence of international investors in the UK stock market looks at first glance like a success story for London. But it鈥檚 really a tale of declining domestic ownership and a resulting leadership vacuum among shareholders. In theory, the nationality of owners shouldn鈥檛 matter. In practice, the withdrawal of the home crowd puts UK companies at the mercy of opportunistic hedge funds when they need to raise cash.鈥 鈥 Chris Hughes in 鈥溾
BLOOMBERG OPINION


