Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Why The World Economy Is Likely To Collapse (In 1 Simple Chart)

Why The World Economy Is Likely To Collapse (In 1 Simple Chart)

SOURCE 

No difficult economic terms, no tough charts, just simple math.
1 - The worlds population of under 40 year olds (excluding Africa) has essentially peaked (chart below...bars represent 0-40yr/old population, dashed lines UN future estimates).  What is interesting about the under 40 year old population is that they are responsible for about 97% of all pregnancies / births.  It's not impossible for 40+ year old women to have children, just statistically very rare (particularly outside the developed world).



Ok, we've established the global under 40 population (excluding Africa) has essentially peaked...now we lay out the chart below that a shrinking population (above) isn't replacing themselves.  Chart below shows world fertility rates, again breaking world fertility (ex-Africa) from the African fertility rate.  The world (ex-Africa) has fallen below the 2.1 births per female replacement level...and even Africa is rapidly slowing.

A flat to shrinking child bearing population that is not reproducing at a rate to replace themselves and the fertility rates continue to fall.  This all points to the potential the low UN 0-40yr/old population estimate could be fairly accurate (chart 1, lower bound).  With either the medium or low estimate, the UN is telling us they expect a massive depopulation of under 40 year olds world-over.  Somewhere between 1 billion to 2.5 billion fewer under 40yr/olds by the turn of the century & perhaps well in excess of a 50% decline (except for Africa?!?).  I lay out why the Ex-Africa approach to viewing global economics makes sense, HERE.
The next three charts show annual global population growth, excluding Africa (the charts show average annual population growth per five year periods).
Chart below, (1) annual population growth clearly peaked in the '85-'90 timeframe at about +75 million year over year growth, and 2 - the makeup of that growth has entirely shifted from primarily among under 40yr/olds to primarily 65+yr/olds.  These trends are about to get much worse, from an economic and consumption standpoint.

The chart below is focusing on the changing nature of the annual global population growth.

Finally, a quick look at select years to show the changing nature of the global population growth...shifting from nearly entirely growth among the young to declines among the young only somewhat offset by the elderly living far longer.

All the interest rate cuts and debt has been undertaken under the paradigm that it would be more easily repaid in the future...but now we've come to "the future" where there are fewer of us to service the debt, buy homes, buy cars, consume our way to prosperity...or pay the taxes to keep the social systems solvent.  Basically, we are doing our best Wile E. Coyote impression...we've gone over the cliff but somehow haven't realized it quite yet.  What this has looked like in the US and globally...HERE.
Of course, the flipside is the 40+ year old world (ex-Africa) population is set to continue soaring (chart below).  Unfortunately, by age 65, the population consumes at about 70% of it's peak earning years...and by 75, consumption falls to somewhere around 50-60%.  The elderly are credit averse, have made their major life purchases and spending (kids, homes, college) and turn to net sellers in retirement.  Absent a growing population of young to buy their assets (IRA's, homes, etc.), we have a small problem (central bank asset purchases to the rescue).  As for Africa, the population growth there generally consume at a rate of 5-10% the consumption of the depopulating young they are replacing.  Global economic activity and consumption are likely to fall off a steep, high precipice.

The implications economically, financially, societally, etc. etc. of a collapsing population of young and soaring older population should be ringing alarm bells...but instead our politicians seem officially mindless (or intentionally misleading the populace) in the face of a cataclysmic shift.
Just to make the point...here is what the shift looks like for the US.  The breakdown in growth among 25-54yr/old employees (blue line) coinciding with interest rate cuts (black line) and massive federal debt increases (red line).

The chart below shows total federal debt apportioned per the nearly 100 million 25-54yr/old employees (red columns) vs. the non-growth in wages shown by the real median household income (green line).

 

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