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But he said replacement level, not rise. And in particular, replacement of young earners and tax contributors.
Doesn't matter -- if a modern industrial economy can handle a steady population it can handle a declining population. Replacement fertility is said to be 2.1 births per woman, and the number of workers supporting each retired person is not going to fall off a cliff just because fertility falls from 2.100 to 2.099. The point is, the previous poster committed the fallacy of exhaustive hypotheses: there are other possibilities besides having too few workers per retiree or speeding up the insertion of new young. The obvious being (a) increase the retirement age to track improvements in longevity and health, or (b) increase capitalization -- saving, investment, and automation -- so that it takes fewer workers to support an old person. These are better solutions than adding more people. Adding more people is the principle cause of environmental degradation, global warming, and the sixth mass extinction. Low birth rates are a good thing, and Germany needs immigration low to avoid the fate of Japan.

peoplepusher.jpg

Once again, having a low birth rate is the opposite of overcrowding. The US birth rate is lower than 2.099, it is 1.86. Yes, working past retirement is a solution for a lower birth rate but it only is a stop gap, measure, as long as the birth rate stays below the replacement rate the problem will keep getting worse, requiring people to work even longer past a common retirement age. Finally it will be work until you die, and even then it will continue to get worse.

Increased automation is only going to help in manufacturing and we have pushed most of those jobs overseas. Most people in the US are now in the service industries. Besides, thanks to the economic policies of neoliberalism all of the gains from automation and improved productivity now go to profits and increased profits don't impact the real economy that we are talking about here. Increased profits makes the rich richer but the rich save their money they don't increase their spending by a great deal if any. This is why supply side economics has been such a failure at spreading the wealth and such a success at making the already rich even richer, which must be the objective of supply side economics.
 
I asked a simple question a year ago that was never answered. Germany needs immigration to avoid the fate of Japan, too many elderly with not enough workers to support them because their birth rate is no longer replacing those who die.

The Germans have a long history of Turkish and Italian immigration to provide their much needed workers. But first the Italians and then the Turks started to go home and the Germanized ones who stayed have as low of a birth rate as the native born Germans do.

To those who oppose muslim immigration on religious grounds: Where do you suggest that the Germans look to for their much needed immigration? Mexico?


This is not a trivial question for the US. Our birth rate is now below the replacement level, all of our population growth is due to immigration.

Germany can take people mainly on work visas but only take in what it needs to avoid overcrowding.

When Germany did a census 4 or 5 years ago, they found they had almost one and a half million fewer people (almost 2% of the total) than they'd expected based on extrapolation.

That's some serious overcrowding!

And even Germany is not too crowded, much less the US. A German farmer produced enough food to feed 75 Germans in 1990. There were about 800,000 people working in agriculture, enough to feed 60 million people. By 2009 one agricultural worker was feeding 140 people and the workforce had declined proportionally.

One US farmer feeds 200+ people. The Germans are less efficient because of their irrational obsession with growing "organic" crops in which they trade yield to gain a poorer quality of higher priced food. Meanwhile I still am waiting for someone to give me an example of inorganic food that is grown. Oxymoron?

Overcrowding is the exact opposite of the problem.
 
I asked a simple question a year ago that was never answered. Germany needs immigration to avoid the fate of Japan, too many elderly with not enough workers to support them because their birth rate is no longer replacing those who die.

The Germans have a long history of Turkish and Italian immigration to provide their much needed workers. But first the Italians and then the Turks started to go home and the Germanized ones who stayed have as low of a birth rate as the native born Germans do.

To those who oppose muslim immigration on religious grounds: Where do you suggest that the Germans look to for their much needed immigration? Mexico?


This is not a trivial question for the US. Our birth rate is now below the replacement level, all of our population growth is due to immigration.

Germany can take people mainly on work visas but only take in what it needs to avoid overcrowding.

When Germany did a census 4 or 5 years ago, they found they had almost one and a half million fewer people (almost 2% of the total) than they'd expected based on extrapolation.

That's some serious overcrowding!

'Overcrowding' is whichphilosophy's code word for "I am not a racist, but...". It's a post-hoc reason to justify his knee-jerk disgust at foreigners.

Apparently overcrowding caused by people all wanting to live in big cities is a major problem, when they arrive from overseas; But of no concern if they arrive from the rural and regional districts of the same country.
 
I asked a simple question a year ago that was never answered. Germany needs immigration to avoid the fate of Japan, too many elderly with not enough workers to support them because their birth rate is no longer replacing those who die.

The Germans have a long history of Turkish and Italian immigration to provide their much needed workers. But first the Italians and then the Turks started to go home and the Germanized ones who stayed have as low of a birth rate as the native born Germans do.

To those who oppose muslim immigration on religious grounds: Where do you suggest that the Germans look to for their much needed immigration? Mexico?


This is not a trivial question for the US. Our birth rate is now below the replacement level, all of our population growth is due to immigration.
The policy that population should constantly rise so enough new people will provide enough income to old people is a Ponzi scheme.

It is a Ponzi scheme then called life.

Who will support the elderly then if not the current workers?

The number of workers has to at least stay the same for the burden on the current work force to be tolerable.

Nah, all that needs to increase is total production. If that can be done without an increase in population (eg through automation) then a declining population is perfectly fine. The number of retirees one worker can support increases over time, as workers become more productive.
 
Looking at Muslim countries for the growth of tax payers immigration to sustain welfare payments to balance it is so far out of whack that it sounds ridiculous. The vast majority of Muslim immigrants are themselves welfare recipients.

No such problem here in Australia, aye? We simply do not let them enter the country. Instead we have imprisoned all of the 2000 or so asylum seekers that have attempted to get in since 2012 in offshore detention centres at a cost of over 5 billion dollars. We iz smart, we iz.
 
Who will support the elderly then if not the current workers?

The number of workers has to at least stay the same for the burden on the current work force to be tolerable.
Alternatively, you could change the system to ensure that the mass of workers are more equitably recompensed for their work, but that would involve evening out the wealth curve. If you think it's a bad idea that the top 1% should be stopped from salting away the bulk of monetary benefits, you are part of the problem.

Another point worth noting is that eventually the ratio of pensioners to workers will stabilise. If not, we'd finish up with more people at or over the pensionable age than under - an absurd proposition unless the birth rate is zero or near it. In reality the ratio of pensioner to worker will reduce, then stabilise when the births get stuck at a particular rate. What that rate actually turns out to be does not matter, as long as it stays steady.
 
No such problem here in Australia, aye? We simply do not let them enter the country. Instead we have imprisoned all of the 2000 or so asylum seekers that have attempted to get in since 2012 in offshore detention centres at a cost of over 5 billion dollars. We iz smart, we iz.
Australia is smart.
5 billion is a bargain compared to moneys countries like Germany, Sweden and Italy are having to shell out.

By blocking boat arrivals, further arrivals were discouraged. That's why you have only 2,000 and not 200,000 or worse. 2000 is a very small number. And they are not imprisoned. They are free to go back home to whatever Bumfuckistan they came from, mostly Afghanistan. By the way, of all the mass migrants, Afghans seem to be causing the most problems in Europe. So you are well advised to keep them at a safe distance:
Afghan teen in custody over fatal stabbing of German girl
Afghan migrant accused of killing Freiburg student admits to lying about age
Germany ax attack injures several on train, police kill suspect
Look at what is happening in Europe. Merkel threw the floodgates wide open and a million migrants, vast majority of them military age men, marched in (and even though it was ostensibly for Syrian refugees, only about half of the total were Syrians). Now they will all most likely get to bring their families, lest a new law is passed within 2 months. That is very unlikely however, since Germany currently has no real government (Merkel has only been the acting chancellor since the new Bundestag was sworn in last October) and the party Merkel's C?U is debating a coalition, SPD, is in favor of migrants bringing their entire families. So the million Merkel let in in 2015 will quickly grow to 3-4 million. Each of which will be eligible for ample (and expensive) social services, including healthcare and education. Now, Merkel could go with the minority government and pass a law blocking migrants bringing their families with the votes of CDU, CSU, FDP and AfD, but I do not think she is up for it. But there is a clear parliamentary majority as well as popular majority against letting a few more millions of migrants into the country that the acting chancellor is ignoring.
Then there are migrant boats in the Mediterranean. Even with training the Libyan coast guard and significant reduction in migrant arrivals, still over 100,000 have arrived in Italy in 2017. Almost all of them are economic migrants from places like Senegal or Nigeria or even Bangladesh, but they all still apply for asylum. And if they apply for asylum you can't deport them and you have to pay for their room and board for years and years (after all, they are uneducated and some are even illiterate), and most likely forever, because it is very difficult to deport migrants from EU, even when their asylum claims are as bogus as a 3 Euro coin.

So yes, Australia's policy is very smart indeed.
 
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But he said replacement level, not rise. And in particular, replacement of young earners and tax contributors.
Doesn't matter -- if a modern industrial economy can handle a steady population it can handle a declining population. Replacement fertility is said to be 2.1 births per woman, and the number of workers supporting each retired person is not going to fall off a cliff just because fertility falls from 2.100 to 2.099. The point is, the previous poster committed the fallacy of exhaustive hypotheses: there are other possibilities besides having too few workers per retiree or speeding up the insertion of new young. The obvious being (a) increase the retirement age to track improvements in longevity and health, or (b) increase capitalization -- saving, investment, and automation -- so that it takes fewer workers to support an old person. These are better solutions than adding more people. Adding more people is the principle cause of environmental degradation, global warming, and the sixth mass extinction. Low birth rates are a good thing, and Germany needs immigration low to avoid the fate of Japan.

peoplepusher.jpg

Once again, having a low birth rate is the opposite of overcrowding.
Yes. That makes low birth rate a good thing for people in an overcrowded country like Japan. It would be a good thing for Germany to never get that crowded.

The US birth rate is lower than 2.099, it is 1.86.
In the first place, that's almost certainly a temporary phenomenon, a consequence of mainstream culture no longer pressuring women to have babies they don't want. It just means subcultures that breed faster than this will become a higher fraction of the population and the rate will pop back up over a period of generations. If that doesn't happen because all the subcultures somehow participate in the drop, then genes for wanting babies whether you're being pressured or not will just become more prevalent.

In the second place, the replacement fertility rate is a function of the sex ratio. If average women against all odds continue to only want 1.86 babies in the long term, that's nothing that can't be dealt with simply by making 86 baby boys per 100 baby girls. Sperm sorting technology is on its way.

And in the third place, the "not enough workers to support them because their birth rate is no longer replacing those who die" argument is qualitative, and not sensitive to the difference between 2.099 and 1.86. If you want to make an issue of how far below 2.099 1.86 is, you'll need to present a quantitative argument and run the numbers.

Yes, working past retirement is a solution for a lower birth rate but it only is a stop gap, measure, as long as the birth rate stays below the replacement rate the problem will keep getting worse, requiring people to work even longer past a common retirement age. Finally it will be work until you die, and even then it will continue to get worse.
Show your work. What you wrote makes no mathematical sense.

Increased automation is only going to help in manufacturing and we have pushed most of those jobs overseas. Most people in the US are now in the service industries.
What the heck are you talking about? Labor saving machinery is ubiquitous in service industries and computerization is only accelerating that trend.

Besides, thanks to the economic policies of neoliberalism all of the gains from automation and improved productivity now go to profits and increased profits don't impact the real economy that we are talking about here. Increased profits makes the rich richer but the rich save their money they don't increase their spending by a great deal if any. This is why supply side economics has been such a failure at spreading the wealth and such a success at making the already rich even richer, which must be the objective of supply side economics.
Macroeconomics takes PhD-level expertise and -- disclaimer -- I'm an Econ-101 guy. But (a) that paragraph sounds ideologically motivated and economically ridiculous, (b) you haven't ever given me a reason to think you have PhD-level expertise on economics, and (c) what you're talking about in that paragraph appears to be orthogonal to the problem of whether high immigration is necessary to keep old people going. If, against all odds, you're right about automation and profits, that only shows we have a distribution problem, not a not-enough-people problem. And we already knew there was a distribution problem. So until you quote a U. of Chicago economist saying Germany needs immigrants because gains from automation go to profits, I have no reason to take that last argument seriously.
 
When Germany did a census 4 or 5 years ago, they found they had almost one and a half million fewer people (almost 2% of the total) than they'd expected based on extrapolation.

That's some serious overcrowding!

'Overcrowding' is whichphilosophy's code word for "I am not a racist, but...". It's a post-hoc reason to justify his knee-jerk disgust at foreigners.

Apparently overcrowding caused by people all wanting to live in big cities is a major problem, when they arrive from overseas; But of no concern if they arrive from the rural and regional districts of the same country.
Over and over, you keep making that same lame argument. Give it a rest, or produce some bloody evidence that if they arrive from the rural and regional districts of the same country, it's of no concern to whichphilosophy. I sure as heck don't want yet more Americans moving to San Jose and making the traffic jams even worse; the circumstance that since they're Americans there's no legal way to stop them does not logically imply that I don't mind. And the fact that you are so itching to infer racism that you trump up the accusation based on an argument so painfully obviously fallacious indicates a character flaw.
 
The policy that population should constantly rise so enough new people will provide enough income to old people is a Ponzi scheme.

It is a Ponzi scheme then called life.
Everywhere we look in nature, populations of life forms grow exponentially until the earth turns into a black hole.
 
I asked a simple question a year ago that was never answered. Germany needs immigration to avoid the fate of Japan, too many elderly with not enough workers to support them because their birth rate is no longer replacing those who die.

The Germans have a long history of Turkish and Italian immigration to provide their much needed workers. But first the Italians and then the Turks started to go home and the Germanized ones who stayed have as low of a birth rate as the native born Germans do.

To those who oppose muslim immigration on religious grounds: Where do you suggest that the Germans look to for their much needed immigration? Mexico?


This is not a trivial question for the US. Our birth rate is now below the replacement level, all of our population growth is due to immigration.
The policy that population should constantly rise so enough new people will provide enough income to old people is a Ponzi scheme.

It is a Ponzi scheme then called life.

Who will support the elderly then if not the current workers?

The number of workers has to at least stay the same for the burden on the current work force to be tolerable.

Ever heard of superannuation?
 
It is a Ponzi scheme then called life.

Who will support the elderly then if not the current workers?

The number of workers has to at least stay the same for the burden on the current work force to be tolerable.

Ever heard of superannuation?

LOL - do you think that the money you put into Super is securly stored somewhere to be paid out to you in the future?

It's not.

The amount you can claim on retirement is completely dependent on the state of the economy when you retire. That is, it's dependent on the people who are working at that time - just as the money available in Super to retirees today depends on the economy as it is now (and not as it was back when today's retirees were contributing to it).
 
It is a Ponzi scheme then called life.

Who will support the elderly then if not the current workers?

The number of workers has to at least stay the same for the burden on the current work force to be tolerable.

Nah, all that needs to increase is total production. If that can be done without an increase in population (eg through automation) then a declining population is perfectly fine. The number of retirees one worker can support increases over time, as workers become more productive.

This is true, but it is limited. Automation's greatest impact is in manufacturing and we in the US have shipped our labor intensive work overseas or already automated it. Also, the support for social security comes from the regressive payroll tax. The reason that our wages have stagnated over the last forty years is that all of the gains from innovation and improved productivity now go to profits. Before then the gains split 50/50 between profits and increased wages. So by automating we would be converting wages which pay the payroll tax to profits that don't pay it.
 
It is a Ponzi scheme then called life.

Who will support the elderly then if not the current workers?

The number of workers has to at least stay the same for the burden on the current work force to be tolerable.

Ever heard of superannuation?

LOL - do you think that the money you put into Super is securly stored somewhere to be paid out to you in the future?

It's not.

The amount you can claim on retirement is completely dependent on the state of the economy when you retire. That is, it's dependent on the people who are working at that time - just as the money available in Super to retirees today depends on the economy as it is now (and not as it was back when today's retirees were contributing to it).

Even if the money *were* securely stored away somewhere, when it is re-introduced into circulation and floods the market for consumer goods, it would cause inflation of the prices of consumer goods, with the effect of suppressing real wages - to the exact same extent as if the workers were paying into an intergenerational transfer system.

For every retiree who consumes goods and services, someone has to produce those goods and services and be recompensed with less than the value of the goods and services produced after all deductions. Else, there wouldn't be any goods and services left after the workers have consumed their shares. Whether they get the money on hand but pay hefty rates to social security, or whether they don't see the money in the first place because their bosses have to pay hefty dividends to the fund that owns the company is, in effect, hardly relevant.

It's a logical necessity that, if people consume who do not produce, those who produce will have to produce more than they're consuming. This fact is independent of whether the system that allocates the non-producers their share of the production is called and investment bank and the rates dividends, or whether it's called social security and intergenerational transfer. It is independent even of whether you live under capitalism, communism, feudalism, or some other economic system yet to be conceived. The effect on the working population can only be alleviated by either a) high productivity, or b) a high share of workers among the total population.
 
Who will support the elderly then if not the current workers?

The number of workers has to at least stay the same for the burden on the current work force to be tolerable.
Alternatively, you could change the system to ensure that the mass of workers are more equitably recompensed for their work, but that would involve evening out the wealth curve. If you think it's a bad idea that the top 1% should be stopped from salting away the bulk of monetary benefits, you are part of the problem.

Then I am part of the problem. I believe in the radical idea that the purpose of the economy, the reason that it exists is to distribute the gains from the the economy to the workers who make it run, so that they can provide for their families and be happy and secure in their lives. Implicit in this is the idea that this distribution should be somewhat equitable, that no one should hoard massive amounts of wealth far beyond what they could spend, especially if there is anyone in the society who is willing to work but yet is considered to be poor in relation to the standard of others in the society. That those who try to gain unearned income off of the backs of people who are willing to work should be at the back of the line instead of at the front when the gains are distributed.

The purpose of profits is to keep the machinery of capitalism operating, nothing more. Profit isn't the purpose of the economy, providing for the members of society is. We only need as much profit to provide new investment. We are currently producing more than seven times the amount of profits as we are investing. This is obscene and totally unnecessary. The economy is not an end to itself.

Another point worth noting is that eventually the ratio of pensioners to workers will stabilise. If not, we'd finish up with more people at or over the pensionable age than under - an absurd proposition unless the birth rate is zero or near it. In reality the ratio of pensioner to worker will reduce, then stabilise when the births get stuck at a particular rate. What that rate actually turns out to be does not matter, as long as it stays steady.

The problem is that the birthrate in all of the developed countries is dropping. And it is dropping below the replacement rate which means that the number of retired people will increase relative to the number of workers.
 
The problem is that the birthrate in all of the developed countries is dropping. And it is dropping below the replacement rate which means that the number of retired people will increase relative to the number of workers.

Part of that calculation involves equating wealth with manufactured goods. If you look at the entire planet as a single resource that varies only with the level of technology used for exploiting that resource, a diminishing population makes everyone "richer". Yeah, things do get tough, even in the zero-sum game, when the population declines. But once it reaches a stable point, everyone is better off.
 
Once again, having a low birth rate is the opposite of overcrowding.
Yes. That makes low birth rate a good thing for people in an overcrowded country like Japan. It would be a good thing for Germany to never get that crowded.

The discussion has nothing to do with overcrowding. It is a discussion of the distribution of the ages of people in the population.

If there are eight workers for everyone who is retired the payroll taxes for the eight workers will be lower than if there are only two workers for everyone who is retired.

The US birth rate is lower than 2.099, it is 1.86.
In the first place, that's almost certainly a temporary phenomenon, a consequence of mainstream culture no longer pressuring women to have babies they don't want. It just means subcultures that breed faster than this will become a higher fraction of the population and the rate will pop back up over a period of generations. If that doesn't happen because all the subcultures somehow participate in the drop, ...

Of course, one of the many reasons that the birth rate has dropped is because women want to pursue their careers and that few fathers aren't willing to abandon their careers. But the main reason is that the cost of raising a child in the developed countries is high, meaning that couples are having fewer children. And these factors are the same for the subcultures, most tend to limit the number of children that they have in the second and third generations in a developed country.

It any of these factors might be temporary, but it hasn't been in Japan.

... then genes for wanting babies whether you're being pressured or not will just become more prevalent.

This approaches babbling. I need some more explanation before I can accept the "Theory of Yearning Genes."

In the second place, the replacement fertility rate is a function of the sex ratio. If average women against all odds continue to only want 1.86 babies in the long term, that's nothing that can't be dealt with simply by making 86 baby boys per 100 baby girls. Sperm sorting technology is on its way.

And in the third place, the "not enough workers to support them because their birth rate is no longer replacing those who die" argument is qualitative, and not sensitive to the difference between 2.099 and 1.86. If you want to make an issue of how far below 2.099 1.86 is, you'll need to present a quantitative argument and run the numbers.

You asserted that 2.1 is the birthrate needed to maintain the population and I have no reason to doubt it. Any birthrate under this will mean that the population decreases. Any birth rate greater than 2.1 and the population will increase. The only thing that lower birth rate of 1.86 and 2.099 will mean is the speed of the decrease in the population.

Yes, working past retirement is a solution for a lower birth rate but it only is a stop gap, measure, as long as the birth rate stays below the replacement rate the problem will keep getting worse, requiring people to work even longer past a common retirement age. Finally it will be work until you die, and even then it will continue to get worse.
Show your work. What you wrote makes no mathematical sense.

Point taken. If everyone works until they die then no one will retire. What I said makes no sense.

But do you want to work until you die to lessen the strain on Social Security?

Increased automation is only going to help in manufacturing and we have pushed most of those jobs overseas. Most people in the US are now in the service industries.
What the heck are you talking about? Labor saving machinery is ubiquitous in service industries and computerization is only accelerating that trend.

The largest service sector is the financial sector and it is heavily computerized. In your opinion are there fewer people working in the financial sector and is the amount of money that they cost the economy more or less than it was forty years ago?

Besides, thanks to the economic policies of neoliberalism all of the gains from automation and improved productivity now go to profits and increased profits don't impact the real economy that we are talking about here. Increased profits makes the rich richer but the rich save their money they don't increase their spending by a great deal if any. This is why supply side economics has been such a failure at spreading the wealth and such a success at making the already rich even richer, which must be the objective of supply side economics.
Macroeconomics takes PhD-level expertise and -- disclaimer -- I'm an Econ-101 guy. But (a) that paragraph sounds ideologically motivated and economically ridiculous, (b) you haven't ever given me a reason to think you have PhD-level expertise on economics, and (c) what you're talking about in that paragraph appears to be orthogonal to the problem of whether high immigration is necessary to keep old people going. If, against all odds, you're right about automation and profits, that only shows we have a distribution problem, not a not-enough-people problem. And we already knew there was a distribution problem. So until you quote a U. of Chicago economist saying Germany needs immigrants because gains from automation go to profits, I have no reason to take that last argument seriously.

I know that you are only an Econ 101 level of understanding of economics. You and I have discussed economics before. I also know that you show no interest in understanding economics any better than you already do.

The University of Chicago is the hot bed of neoliberal economics. They push supply side economics, the idea that if we give all of the gains from automation to the rich that they will invest more, wages will go up and we will all become rich. This doesn't require any great understanding of economics to realize that this doesn't happen. The gains from automation can only split into one of two places, either to wages or to profits. If what we want are higher wages why would we increase profits? If we have been putting all of our gains from productivity gains into profits for the last forty years what conclusions can you draw about supply side economics, is it working?

You have to be careful about economics. Most people do make ideologic statements about economics because they talk about the way that they wished that the economy was. They wish that it was a self-regulating free market. They wish the economy was constrained by supply, that growth was dependent on the amount of capital available. They wish that supply and demand set prices, that marginal productivity forced the price down to the costs of the last possible product produced. That the economy had a natural interest rate and that the economy always seeks general equilibrium. They wish that the market exhibited rational expectations. Some others wish that the economy could be simpler, more local, more like it was in some time in the past, that each contributes based on his abilities and receives based on his needs. Some wish that the government wasn't needed. Some wish that the government could do all of it.

What I try to do is to understand the economy that we have right now. I think that there is a lot of value built in to the economy that we have because it has been tested for two thousand years. It has evolved in response to massive changes. It is very resilient and strong. That we need to deal with the economy the way that it is, not the way that we wish that it could be.

The University of Chicago economics is filled with wishers. The founder of neoliberalism, Milton Friedman of the University of Chicago, had a theory about wishing. He said that the economy could be changed by wishing, that all we have to do is to treat the economy as if it was the way that we wished it to be, and that it will behave for us as if it is the way that we wish it to be. . Sadly, it hasn't worked out. We can't make the government not have to police the economy for bad actors by treating the economy as if there were no bad actors. We can't force the economy full employment, low unemployment equilibrium by wishing that it always returns there.

None of the wishes above are true. The gains from automation, from the increases in productivity do now go into profits. Forty years ago the gains from productivity were split evenly between increases in profits and increases in wages.



1980 is when the wages stopped increasing with growth and increases in productivity. Lower wages equals higher profits.

Social Security is supported by a payroll tax on wages. Automation increases productivity, and decreases wages because it costs jobs, but it increases profits. Automation lowers the payroll taxes collected. No payroll taxes are collected on profits.

Are we clear now?
 
... That makes low birth rate a good thing for people in an overcrowded country like Japan. It would be a good thing for Germany to never get that crowded.
Overcrowding has never been a problem for Germany. Looking east there's so much Lebensraum to expand into.
 
Another point worth noting is that eventually the ratio of pensioners to workers will stabilise. If not, we'd finish up with more people at or over the pensionable age than under - an absurd proposition unless the birth rate is zero or near it. In reality the ratio of pensioner to worker will reduce, then stabilise when the births get stuck at a particular rate. What that rate actually turns out to be does not matter, as long as it stays steady.

The problem is that the birthrate in all of the developed countries is dropping. And it is dropping below the replacement rate which means that the number of retired people will increase relative to the number of workers.
The bit you're quoting explains why that is not a permanent problem. Once the birthrate levels out - and it does not matter where it levels out - the ratio between pensioners and workers will eventually normalise.
 
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