受各国关注的人口统计

 

With demographics creating a rich tapestry of challenges and opportunities, it's important to take a closer country-specific look to uncover shared trends and collective insights across the Asia-Pacific landscape. 

IN this edition of Voice of Asia, we asked each country to look into three key questions to bring their own voice to the topic of demographics:

  • What are the opportunities for industries related to population changes in your country?
  • As a result of the population changing, what are you seeing in your country around the income/socioeconomic inequalities and the rise of disenfranchised communities?
  • How is digital technology driving changes across the workforce in your country?

 

CHINA

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

China’s population is ageing. That is not only because we are living longer, but also because there are fewer young people—the next generation of workers—in the country. This is why the government recently decided to do away with the one-child policy and has even encouraged discussions to encourage women to have two children, an attempt that has had only limited success so far, with the birth rate rising from below 1.5 in 2000 to just 1.57 in 2015.1 Indeed, sharp declines in the number of young adults across the last decade may have led to the labour shortages that have been felt by the manufacturing sector in recent years.

Rising labour costs have also resulted in the migration of some industries to less developed countries (such as Indonesia and Vietnam), as well as a continued drive to automation and strong demand for vocational education.

In general, these demographic trends will favour services and weigh on the manufacturing sector. From the government’s perspective, China must retain its advantages in the manufacturing sector—advantages that are increasingly built on the back of first class infrastructure linked to an educated and productive workforce.

In addition, in common with much of the world, the generations born after 1990 show a much higher propensity to consume, rather than save, due to lower aversion to credit and a greater acceptance of digital payments. It will be impossible to truly understand China’s growing consumer spending without appreciating its confident young consumers, whose audacity of spending has provided a floor to growth against the backdrop of economic moderation. The policy implication is clear—China does not need to have another stimulus in order to cushion potential sharp slowdown. For companies that are targeting Chinese consumers, those who were born after 1990 are a force to be reckoned with. 

These demographic changes are also underpinning demand growth in the health care industry, with citizens becoming more health-conscious and therefore demanding better services. However, supply has lagged significantly.

On health care policies, both Taiwan and Hong Kong (where universal health care is being made available) could provide some interesting lessons. In Taiwan and Hong Kong, life expectancies (80 and 84 years respectively2) are higher than those of many developed countries, and yet, health care expenditures are well under control (accounting for 6.7 percent and 5.7 percent of GDP respectively, not much higher than China's 5.7 percent).

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

Yet, even as China tries to mitigate the negative impacts of these demographic trends, policy remedies must also address the welfare of disadvantaged groups.

China’s rapid pace of urbanisation and asset inflation means that those who do not already own property have to struggle to survive in big cities. Many of these people flocked to cities as migrant workers but find they may be forced back to their villages. In addition, it is often extremely challenging for them to acquire new skills in the rapidly transforming economy.

Meanwhile, the elderly who have been left behind are in an even worse position. They get little access to public services, such as health care, and have the least amount of lobbying impact.

Migrant workers who have successfully settled in cities face challenges as well. Their children often do not have adequate access to even the basic amenities that are taken for granted by urban dwellers.

In short, while an ageing population has heightened China’s urgency to move away from the middle-income trap, certain policy remedies that are aimed at raising productivity are exposing the vulnerability of disadvantaged groups because they are less connected to education, health care, and social mobility.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

Many of the changes being brought about by digital technology in China are breathtaking. In light of sharply rising labour costs, the Chinese Government is determined to move up the value chain by using robots and artificial intelligence (AI) to raise national productivity.

The rise of robots and AI will have its biggest impact by replacing jobs involving repetitive tasks rather than those involving personal interaction. This poses a particular challenge for China, whose great advances in recent decades have been relatively more focused in areas such as manufacturing rather than service sectors. Other things equal, that says the rise of machines looms larger as a game changer for China than it does for many other nations.

For example:

A major energy company has built four intelligent factories for demonstration purposes and boosted labour productivity in these pilot plants by over 10 percent.4 Their factory in Zhenhai in southern China is the first fully enclosed, fully automated chemical warehouse in China, where the staff were reduced by 66 percent.

A large appliance maker retrofitted its factory into an intelligent one, and managed to reduce the number of employees from over 3,000 to just 700.

In the red-hot fintech sector, where Chinese companies are likely to emerge as global leaders, interesting applications are increasingly pervasive. Investment and trading are being done by AI, which makes use of big data to predict market trends and improve investment portfolio performance.

In health care, machines are being built to complete specific tasks such as assistance in medical imaging, precision medical care, health management, and drug research and development.

In the foreseeable future, continued digitisation, along with the development of robots and AI, will facilitate the further movement of workers from repetitive to innovative work.

 

JAPAN

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

Rapid ageing of the Japanese population has changed the needs of people and the way businesses satisfy them. While falls in population overall are a negative for demand, the Japanese experience has shown that ageing can have positive impacts as well,6 7 increasing demand for some sectors such as:

Health care and nursing services for the elderly, including funeral-related services

Consumer goods for the older person, including disposable diapers, high-quality and small-portioned daily meals, anti-ageing products, high-class and well-prepared cruises, and/or train tours.

Age-appropriate houses and social infrastructure, such as high-rise apartments close to big city centres, and urban design concepts such as “compact city,“ (which realise high residential density in a small area with multiple social functionalities).

Asset management and testamentary trust services, as well as insurance policies focusing more on longevity risk than on mortality risk.

While an ageing population increases opportunities for industries that provide the above products and services, there are a number of positive impacts on the supply side, as there will be increasing need for:

 

Labour-saving technologies, including robotics, sharing economies, and AI

Aged worker retraining services, adapting the capabilities of the elderly after their retirement to meet labour market needs.

Child-care services to help mobilise the female labour force, along with a variety of services to support working women.

Foreign worker training services, which assist in adapting foreign workers’ capabilities to the requirements of Japanese immigration regulations, and a variety of services to support the daily life of foreigners in Japan.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

The declining potential growth tends to result in looser monetary policy, but those lower interest rates—and the higher asset prices they generate—result in increasing inequalities between the asset-rich elderly and income-poor younger generations.

Over time, that divergence can increase the younger generation’s economic dependence on the elderly, discouraging young people from getting married and starting families. In turn, this can lead to further falls in the birth rate.

Furthermore, the increasing importance of holding assets (for instance, real estate in big cities) over generating income flow tends to reinforce the division between rich and poor families over generations (though that could be mitigated by future inheritance tax hikes).

The issues created by declining and ageing populations also tend to have greater impact on disenfranchised communities, posing further risks to social harmony. Some of these problems are now being addressed, for example, by using the idea of a compact city, which means the elderly are encouraged to move from rural to urban areas.

Demographic factors will also change the political scene. The increasingly strong voice of an older generation that accounts for the majority of votes in a democracy will limit the ability of governments to change their pension and health care systems. This may mean more intergenerational income transfer from the young to the old, or cause more consumption at the expense of investment.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

Digital technology may be instrumental in addressing problems that arise from an ageing and declining population.

A prime example can be found in automated driving technology, which can address developing labour shortages in the transport sector—shortages that may arise amid a significant increase in demand for goods and services delivered through e-commerce businesses. Drone technology, already being introduced in the home-delivery service industry, can assist access to services in remote communities.

And the future may see the increasing ability of robots to care for the elderly—abilities that range from physically moving elderly bedridden patients, to stimulating their minds and providing company through AI-generated conversations and interactions. These developments can help address a lack of aged care personnel across Japan.

AI also helps facilitate the transfer of advanced manufacturing skills from experienced older workers to their younger counterparts. Some innovative companies have started to use AI to analyse the “tacit knowledge” of their skilled workers. This includes key manufacturing industries where ageing is becoming a serious problem, such as steel and machinery sectors, but also traditional performing arts and agriculture.

One of the biggest hurdles to Japan accepting more foreign workers, the language barrier, is also being addressed. Recent years have seen the development of many convenient translation applications, particularly for smartphones, which facilitates very smooth conversation between Japanese speakers and foreigners without any pre-existing knowledge of the other language.

 

INDIA

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

India’s demographic dividend has been feeding growth for the last 30 years and is likely to continue to have a positive effect for some decades to come.11The impact has not been consistent across the economy, with some sectors benefiting more than others.

At a broad level:

The services sector has received the biggest push, as it has benefited from an increasingly mobile, adaptive, and educated workforce.

Critically, the IT sector has particularly benefited from India’s changing population. The initial opportunity in this segment was created in the outsourcing industry, largely on the back of a higher education infrastructure that produced an army of English-speaking engineering graduates who were able to work at comparatively lower wages.

That success in IT has since been replicated across a number of service sector segments, where the Indian education system has been able to provide skilled graduates in areas such as health care, accounting, data processing, and legal outsourcing.

The manufacturing sector has also benefited from a range of demographic-related factors, but its gains have been uneven at best and have lagged behind those of the services sector.

India’s largest employer, the agriculture sector, has been unable to climb onto the bandwagon of technological innovations leading to weak productivity increases and rising wage pressures.

Additionally, demographics have ensured the creation of a large and resilient domestic sector. India is already home to one of the largest consumer bases, one that is growing rapidly in terms of both its ability and its willingness to spend.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

India is one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, but it still has a high level of income inequality, primarily due to a lack of adequate growth in its agricultural sector. With a large part of the population still dependent on the sector, this has driven rapid migration from rural areas, not only putting pressure on urban infrastructure, but creating a pool of urban poor struggling with low income and poor access to services. Similarly, landless labourers, marginal farmers, rural artisans, and the communities displaced by environmental and political disturbances still struggle to reap the benefits from India’s strong growth.

If these inequalities are not narrowed, they could restrict the ability of the Indian economy to fully capitalise on future demographically driven expansion. In fact, in its Global Risks Report 2016, the World Economic Forum has identified inequality as a significant risk to global growth in this decade.12 From a policy perspective, the key requirement to enable inclusive growth (apart from employment and education) is a focus on the efficient delivery of government policies and services.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

Digital India is the new aspirational India. There is a widespread focus on expanding the use of digitalisation as a tool to provide direct access to public services and as a means to generate self-employment opportunities and to spread education at a lower cost. The government is trying to push this along with its recent policy of “demonetisation,” which encouraged people to stop using cash, start engaging in electronic payments, and participating in the formal financial sector. The recent creation of a Goods and Services Tax (GST) will hopefully have the effect of boosting digitisation of tax compliance.

The private sector has also started to use digitalisation as a tool to grow sales, and more businesses are now using technology to develop niche-specific business models. A good example is the growth in hyper-local retail along with the growth in e-commerce. Both have grown because of the spread of the Internet and mobile telephony, but they have different business models. Using a digital backbone, aggregation across multiple sectors such as small merchants, urban services, logistics, transport, and even credit, is also growing in importance.

However, growth in technology also threatens employment, at least in the short run. For the IT sector, the country’s premier industry association, NASSCOM, has estimated around 40 percent of the workforce will need reskilling to stay relevant in the face of automation while 5060 percent of jobs will require new skills.13 Automation is an even bigger challenge for manufacturing sectors. There are many instances where companies have opted for higher levels of mechanisation and robotics, in sectors ranging from aviation and warehousing to automobile manufacturing. In effect, technology is seen to be replacing low-skill, routine tasks while putting a premium on high-skill jobs.

For India, changes in technology can lead to the following trends:

Short-term threat to employment, which can become long term if the government and private players do not respond adequately by creating infrastructure to participate in the new technological environment.

On the other hand, it also opens up opportunities to use India’s population base to drive growth across labour-intensive sectors such as textiles, toys, electronics manufacturing and assembly, housing, and infrastructure.
This would provide opportunities for niche sectors such as services for affluent older populations, social entrepreneurship, and so on.

 

TAIWAN

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

With life expectancy on the rise and Baby Boomers reaching retirement age, the proportion of the elderly in Taiwan’s population has been increasing. Taiwan is set to become an aged society (with over 14 percent of the population aged over 65) in 2018 and a super-aged society in 2025 when that proportion passes 20 percent.

Longer life expectancy and high economic growth from 1950 to 200015 are increasing demand for mobility products and services for the elderly, as well as preventing and treating chronic diseases that afflict older people. Consumers have also become more health conscious, creating a demand for organic food and fitness products.

To better utilise its resources to help elderly citizens, the Taiwanese government launched a “long-term care service program 2.0,” which came into effect in 2017. It will boost the number of neighbourhood care stations to 4,529 by 2021, more than double the 2016 level. The program will also increase services provided, and try to reach more people in need via these stations.16 The program creates new business opportunities for medical solution providers to offer their services to neighbourhood care stations.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

An empirical study found that from 1998 to 2006, Taiwan saw a correlation between ageing and rising income inequality. Some of this can be attributed to a decline in multigenerational families, with additional impacts due to a rise in the number of elderly households with no additional income beyond a pension.17 Without income from work, some elderly people need help from the government to make ends meet.

Pension schemes and insurance packages have become increasingly unsustainable because of the rising level of retired population compared to the working age population.18 This, coupled with Taiwan’s slower economic growth since 200019 has placed strains on the current system, thereby leading the government to amend the scheme to prevent it from collapsing. In addition to direct help to the elderly, the “long-term care service program 2.0” also hopes to empower local communities to take care of their elderly members.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

The government has set itself the goal of becoming a “digital country, intelligent island”21 by initiating policies to assist Taiwanese companies to transform themselves. This includes:

Asia Silicon Valley: The government aims to transform Taiwan into the Asia Silicon Valley by building an Internet of Things (IoT) ecosystem22with a focus on six areas: mobile lifestyles, AI, automated driving and piloting, augmented and virtual reality, information security for the IoT,23and Southeast Asian markets.

Fintech and regulatory sandbox: The cabinet passed a draft bill for a regulatory sandbox, which is pending approval by Taiwan’s legislature. The draft would set up a “regulatory sandbox” for financial institutions and technology companies to test innovative services, products, and business models in a live environment with exemption from regulations.

Smart manufacturing: The government has established the Smart Machinery Promotion Office to help manufacturing companies in Taiwan transform to Industry 4.0 standards, with the aim of maintaining the competitiveness of many “hidden champions” in Taiwan.

 

THAILAND

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

Thailand is entering a new era of slow population growth, rapid population ageing, and even probable population decline. The falls may set in by the mid-to-late 2020s, on the back of startlingly low birth rates which have been below the replacement level of 2.1 births per woman for the past two decades.27 The country is also experiencing rapid urbanisation, as more people from the outskirts move towards cities such as Bangkok, often in hopes of better employment outcomes.

These changing demographics have opened up some key business opportunities:

Care of the elderly: Demand for health care products and care services, as well as doctors and nurses, is growing. Demand for long-term residential facilities like elder communities, retirement centres, and nursing homes are also an area of increasing opportunity.

Rebalancing the economy towards services: These major demographic shifts position Thailand as a provider of services geared for an ageing population, such as medical and wellness tourism. Furthermore, as the country ages and the workforce declines, automation will be required to help offset losses by increasing overall efficiency.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

The changing demographic structure has resulted in widening income and socioeconomic disparities as well as an increase in disenfranchised communities. Key trends include:

Growing old before growing rich: Thailand risks becoming mired in the middle-income trap, as the working population declines and productivity diminishes before the economy reaches high income levels.

Rising dependency rates: The shrinking support base of adults that the elderly Thai population can depend on has resulted in a sharp increase in the age-dependency rate,28 straining the working population in Thailand.

Brain drain exacerbating urban-rural disparities: Disparities in national wealth distribution were amplified by the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis and will be further exacerbated by rapid urbanisation as more educated and skilled workers, usually young adults, migrate to urban areas due to the lack of appropriate and attractive jobs in rural areas. The elderly or poor (those not able to afford to move) are usually left behind in rural areas, further intensifying rural-urban disparities. More than 40 percent of Thailand’s poor live in the north-east, with less than 5 percent of the country’s poor living in Bangkok.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

The development of digital technologies in Thailand has strong government support as part of the Thailand 4.0 masterplan to develop 10 industries of the future.30 The goal is to transform the country’s traditional farming, manufacturing and small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) into “smart” enterprises, and to shift traditional services to high-value services. This policy seeks to promote creativity, innovation, and the application of technology in various economic activities that are also high in value-add.

Technology can help ease the gap between skills shortage and an ageing workforce. A shift towards automation and robotics will aid productivity and efficiency as manual labour gets too arduous for an ageing population.

However, Thailand has to ensure that its working age population is well-equipped to handle high-tech processes.

This also means considerable improvements need to be made to its current education system.

 

THE PHILIPPINES

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

The Philippines’ population is expected to cross 120 million in the next decade, an increase of 15 million from current levels.31 However, the rate of population growth is expected to slow as birth and death rates are dropping, even as life expectancy is increasing.

World Bank data shows the Philippines as one of the fastest urbanising countries in the region, with Manila being the most densely populated urban area in the world.32 Currently, 45 percent of Filipinos live in cities, and this proportion is set to surge to around 65 percent by 2050.33 Urbanisation requires cities to improve infrastructure and transport systems to remain sustainable.

Key insights include:

Growth in the construction sector: Urbanisation results in higher demand for housing, functional transport systems, and basic services. Within the next five years, the government plans to increase spending on infrastructure as part of the Build! Build! Build! program—lifting infrastructure from 5.4 percent to 7.4 percent of GDP across this period.

The construction sector will contribute significantly to Philippines’ growth in the future. 

Need for better education: With urbanisation, Filipinos need to improve their skills for better job opportunities in the future. Besides educational institutes, creating online platforms where people can obtain specific technical skills or even diploma courses will be key.

Business Process Outsourcing (BPO): The rapid expansion of the BPO industry is providing the younger workforce with middle-class jobs. There are currently approximately 800 call centres,34 and this is expected to grow in the years to come.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

A report by Asian Development Bank (ADB)35 said that approximately 400 million people in the Asia-Pacific region still experience poverty due to widening income inequality. This may decline in the years to come thanks to:

Higher incomes for rural communities: Urbanisation has mixed impacts on rural communities. While some see a decline in population as workers move from agriculture to more remunerative jobs in the city, efforts by the government to improve rural infrastructure can boost yields and lift rural incomes.

Government intervention: The authorities have adopted a plan which hopes to eradicate poverty by 2040,36 tripling real per capita incomes across this period and wiping out poverty and hunger.

However, other risks remain. In particular, sectarian conflicts could widen the gulf. Filipino Muslims, constituting about 5.6 percent of the population, are a minority in the archipelagic nation. They are also disproportionately located in the poorer parts of the Philippines—notably in the south. In 2015, 59 percent of the population living in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) were classified as poor, and one-third live in extreme poverty.37Events like the recent conflict in Marawi City make it difficult for economic development to take root properly in order to overcome poverty.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

Advances in digital technology have improved the efficiency of financial institutions in the Philippines. For example, the Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) and BDO Unibank Incorporated have recently invested in chatbots and AI to streamline back-end processes and augment customer service.

The Philippines has latched onto the digitalisation wave and is well-poised to ride it to greater heights. The country boasts some of the largest incubator hubs in Southeast Asia and, with appropriately supportive regulatory regimes, the Filipino digital technology scene can potentially drive innovation through the region. With the recent establishment of the QBO Innovation Hub, start-ups and young entrepreneurs can utilise its resources to create a more sustainable business.

 

VIETNAM

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

Despite being youthful in comparison to other Asian countries, with almost half of its population being below the age of 30, Vietnam’s population will undergo a gradual ageing process through to approximately 2040.

The drivers of that process are classic: The country has experienced a remarkable drop in birth rates (from five births per woman in 1980 to just two children per woman in 2016), while the average life expectancy has increased significantly, up from just 40 years in 1960 to 73 years now.

The country’s demographic trends have provided opportunities to tap into the young, emerging middle class which dominates nearly half of the population, as well as to meet their needs in their later years.

Key insights include:

Health care as a primary sector: There will be a growing demand for hospital capacity, elderly care, and pharmaceuticals.

Improved lifestyle options for the emerging middle class: As the country develops, people are migrating to cities in big numbers in pursuit of good jobs. This has created a large and growing consumer class as wages increase and the population becomes more affluent. Demand is expected to increase in the consumer products, infrastructure, IT and education, automotive and housing industries.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

Several disparities are the by-product of changing demographics:

Rising dependency ratios: While the proportion of children in the entire population has shrunk due to declining birth rates, the fast-growing senior population is driving up the overall dependency ratio.

Worsening gender imbalances: The practice of pre-natal sex determination and selection in Vietnam has led to a gender imbalance over the years, with 112.2 male births per 100 female births in 2014,39well above the world average of around 104 male births per 100 female births. While this means there are relatively few girls and young women, women consistently live longer than men; therefore the population aged 65 and over is projected to remain predominantly female.

 

Entrenched urban-rural disparities: Despite recent poverty reduction programmes, the disparities between rural and urban, lowland and upland areas, and between agricultural and non-agricultural sectors have all increased.

 

This will further intensify as more young people move to cities, leaving the poor and elderly behind in rural areas.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

 

The digital economy in Vietnam is thriving. The country’s ICT industry and rate of mobile phone penetration is growing faster than in any other country in the region. Research has found that about 43 percent of Vietnamese learn about products and make decisions through online advertisements,40 and this has given rise to a wave of entrepreneurship including local start-ups and SMEs.

 

With the country’s emerging young population, this trend will only increase in the future. Furthermore, the government aims to make Vietnam the world’s factory. The country will have to build more infrastructure and improve its business operations, especially in the manufacturing sector. Automation will benefit manufacturing in the face of an ageing workforce, particularly as younger workforce turns towards ICT, e-commerce, and start-up activities.

 

MALAYSIA

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

 

Malaysia’s total population is expected to grow by more than 75 percent, from 19 million as recently as a quarter of a century ago to nearly 34 million in 2022. The population aged 65 and above is projected to more than triple over that time, from 700,000 to over 2.5 million, and to reach 7.5 percent of the total population. This highlights the need for Malaysia to improve health care options to accommodate the aged.

 

Key trends include:

 

Increasing need for geriatric health care: As Malaysia’s population ages, chronic diseases and disabilities will become more common, leading to an increased need for professionals trained in geriatric health care. Services such as elderly care, rehabilitation, social clubs, and home nursing also need to be adequate to enable the aged to remain in the community. 

 

Rising demand for insurance: An ageing population will drive the need for health insurance products, such as life insurance plans, as the population increasingly becomes aware of the cost of long-term health care.

 

Additionally, the growth of the Muslim population means there is the prospect of significant growth of the Halal industry to provide food that meets religious requirements. The Halal Industry Development Corporation (HDC) has forecast the global Muslim population will increase from 23 percent to 27 percent in 2030,41 creating business opportunities for the industry, while the government has adopted the Halal Industry Master Plan (HIMP) to expand capacity in this sector over the coming years.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

 

Based on measures of gross household income (including both rural and urban areas) Malaysia’s level of inequality has decreased over the past decade.42 Key insights include:

 

Increased government spending: In the last decade, the government has increased wealth-distribution efforts to address the problem of income inequality. Between 2009 and 2014, the real average household income of the bottom 40 percent grew 11.9 percent each year—outpacing the total increase of 7.9 percent across the population,43 thereby helping close the gap between the groups.

 

Rising top income tax rates: Malaysia’s current tax rate for the top income bracket is at 25 percent—a rate significantly lower than some other Asian economies (for example, 38 percent in Korea and 35 percent in Thailand).44 An increase in the tax rate will help reduce income disparity and generate revenue for development and poverty alleviation projects.

 

Policy reform to promote greater equality among races: Racial discrimination in Malaysia continues to rise, according to the recent Racial Discrimination Report.45 The government should focus on need-based policies to help the bottom 40 percent, regardless of ethnicity, while efforts need to be made to reduce the potential for perceptions of racist overtones in the public sphere.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

 

Deployment of robots in Malaysia increased about 8 percent annually from 2010 to 2015, according to the World Robotics Report.46

 

A case study of a local apparel manufacturer suggests it could increase its production volume by as much as 300 percent by automating its operations, avoiding the hiring of an additional 100 workers and reducing defect rates by 80 to 90 percent.47

 

SINGAPORE

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

 

Singapore is already grappling with a rapidly ageing population and an extremely low birth rate. United Nations population projections suggest the number of Singaporean citizens aged 65 and above will more than double to 1.5 million in the next 15 years, and the government has suggested Singapore will age more rapidly than any other society in the world.48

 

This is likely to drive growth in the following industries:

 

Private health care, pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and nutritionals and supplements: Growth in these industries is likely to be driven by increased health care expenditure arising from the greater prevalence of chronic diseases due to the rising proportion of senior citizens.

 

Asset management services: As asset ownership levels among elderly Singaporeans are relatively high, demand may increase among senior citizens seeking to manage their assets, generating opportunities in the financial services, insurance, and legal industries.

 

Child-care and elderly-care industries: As more families face a situation where fewer working adults are supporting both younger and elderly dependents, demand may rise for child-care services, health care monitoring devices, assisted living technologies, care-giving services, retirement homes, and hospices.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

 

 

The demographic changes discussed above may worsen income inequality (which remains high in Singapore despite falling from a peak in 200749) and wealth inequality (which is rising).

 

Key insights include:

 

Widening of income disparities: This may arise as a result of the government’s policy of making up for falling birth rates (and to prevent Singapore’s population from shrinking) by granting citizenship to immigrants. These immigrants tend to be high-income earners, often drawn by Singapore’s aspirations to become a “global city.” This may raise average incomes at the top, even as incomes for the lower end of the population remain depressed.

 

Exacerbation of wealth inequality: Singapore’s household net wealth has more than doubled in the last decade, but rising levels of wealth inequality suggest that the wealth of the richest Singaporeans is growing much more rapidly than that of Singapore’s poorer households. With falling birth rates, wealth may become increasingly concentrated within smaller families, and this could eventually exacerbate wealth inequality.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

 

Faced with a rapidly ageing and shrinking workforce, Singapore has turned to technological innovation in a bid to boost productivity and economic growth. Automation, intelligent machines, and data analytics can allow firms to cope with decreasing numbers of available workers and raise productivity.

 

However, the adoption of new digital technologies and disruption of existing industries threatens many workers if they are unable to continually adapt and pick up new skills. In an attempt to help the workforce cope with these developments, the government has launched the SkillsFuture initiative to help workers pick up new skills and take advantage of new technologies and the new jobs created.

 

INDONESIA

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

 

Indonesia is set to benefit from the “demographic dividend” over coming decades, where increasing life expectancies and falling birth rates produce an increase in the working-age population and relatively fewer dependents than in previous generations.

 

The proportion of working-age adults is estimated to remain relatively stable at about two-thirds of the total population, which is higher than neighbouring Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) economies such as Thailand or Singapore.

 

Indonesia also faces the fastest rate of urbanisation in Asia, but has so far under-invested in its cities. Many urban communities lack access to safe water, sewer systems, and public transportation, and the resultant congestion, pollution, and disaster risks are holding back economic growth in Indonesia.

 

These trends are likely to drive growth in the following areas:

 

Consumer goods: This includes tourism, entertainment, hospitality, manufacturing, and education. Demand for such goods is likely to increase, given that working adults typically have higher purchasing power and levels of disposable income.

 

Construction, utilities, and transport: Given the rapid urbanisation, these industries are set to benefit from tremendous opportunities as the government is likely to face political pressure to increase investment in urban infrastructure, including public transportation systems, ports, airports, housing, and utility networks.

 

Gaps left by changing Chinese production: Manufacturing costs in China have crept up steadily as average wages in the sector increased by about 80 percent since 2010.50 This means Chinese firms are gradually abandoning low-cost manufacturing and moving up the value chain, thereby opening up an opportunity that Indonesian firms can fill, given the youthful Indonesian population and the need to industrialise. The average daily cost of factory labour in Indonesia is US$9 compared to US$28 in China.51 Indonesia should capitalise on this trend to promote low-cost manufacturing to attract more investors.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

 

Indonesia has one of the highest levels of income and wealth inequality in the world, and the concentration of wealth is also rising faster than in other countries, as the economy continues to grow at a high rate. These trends will likely have the following impacts:

 

Exacerbation of income and wealth inequality: Should assets and capital continue to be largely owned by a small elite class, the richest Indonesians are more likely to benefit disproportionately from the projected high rates of economic growth generated by the demographic dividend.

 

Improvement in the average Indonesian’s access to infrastructure and education: Due to urbanisation, fewer Indonesians live in rural areas and are therefore better able to access good employment, educational opportunities, and infrastructure. Urbanisation may act as a social leveller and moderate any rise in income and wealth inequality.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

 

Internet and smartphone penetration rates remain low in Indonesia compared to other ASEAN economies, such as Malaysia or the Philippines, and the country continues to lag behind in the adoption of digital technologies in the workplace, such as cloud computing, AI, and big data.52 Even though Indonesia does not face the problems of an ageing and shrinking workforce, digital technologies create great opportunities for Indonesia to raise productivity levels.

 

Furthermore, Indonesian’s relatively youthful workforce gives it a significant advantage in adapting to the technological changes that are likely to arise as digital infrastructure in Indonesia catches up with the rest of the world. The increased utilisation of digital technologies in Indonesia will allow it to maximise the economic growth generated by the coming “demographic dividend.” Indonesia will, however, have to make concerted efforts to improve higher education to truly drive growth through digitalisation.

 

AUSTRALIA

OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDUSTRIES

 

Australia has long benefited from the industrialisation of China and India, selling resources to their rapidly growing economies. Now it faces up to the need to transition its economy to ensure future prosperity.

 

Many of the key areas that may drive Australia’s coming growth successes were examined in Deloitte’s Building the lucky country: Positioning for prosperity,53 and three of these in particular are linked closely to demographic trends in the region:

 

Agribusiness: While Australia ranks as the world’s driest continent, it is still a net exporter of food. Population growth across Asia will combine with rising incomes, increasing demands on food production generally, with the additional issue that growth in the size of cities may restrict available land. Demand for Australia’s fresh produce, particularly proteins, is set to rise significantly in coming years.

 

Higher education: Teaching foreign students is Australia’s fourth-biggest export earner, generating an income of AU$20 billion a year54and employing a significant number of Australians. The future potential is also enormous, given the emerging economies of today will become the knowledge economies of tomorrow. The additional possibility of using education as a pathway to Australian citizenship means Australia can sell both education and migration potential. With India, Indonesia, and the Philippines still boasting a growing pool of young workers, there is scope for further expansion in the sector.

 

Wealth management: At the other end of the ageing spectrum, retirement management is set to be a growing industry in the Asia Pacific region that Australia will chase. Two trillion Australian dollars in pension assets under management, a sophisticated finance sector, and the surge in the number of people in Asia aged over 65 should help Australia become a global competitor in the business of managing people’s money.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES AND INEQUALITIES

 

Australia has long recognised the risks from demographic ageing—the 2002 Intergenerational Report55 examined the long-term impacts that these trends would have on government health expenditure, as well as the supply of labour. Since then, large inflows of (typically younger) migrants to Australia have slowed this process and offset the impact that the start of the retirements of the Baby-Boom generation might have seen.

 

Yet, that growth has led to its own problems: As overall population growth rates increased, Australia began to find itself struggling to build the infrastructure required to deal with the rising population as well as surging property prices in the major population centres of Sydney and Melbourne. Combined with weak wage growth, a general surge in populist political sentiment has begun to put pressure on the government to curtail immigration.

 

IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

 

The impacts of digital disruption across all sectors of the economy has long been anticipated by futurists, but the past couple of years have seen this coming change begin to impinge on mainstream discussions. Early effects—for example, the rise of on-demand car services and the demise of print media—are now being eclipsed by the rise of automation across a number of industries.

 

While a strong adopter of technology, as well as a key developer, with Australia’s CSIRO being the creator of the now-ubiquitous WiFi technology,56Australia is still grappling with the scale of infrastructure required to run new digital industries. The construction of the nation’s National Broadband Network, a system to improve connection speeds nationwide, is continuing.

 

What’s next?

 

By taking a bird’s eye view across Asia Pacific, these country-specific spotlights paint a powerful picture of the trends, challenges, risks, and opportunities of demographics.

 

The time for planning, preparation, and innovation is now. We all have a role to play in harnessing the data, insights, and analysis of demographics to cultivate and shape the future of tomorrow.

 

Endnotes

 

 

  1. See fertility rate (total) for China, World Bank, “Fertility rate, total (births per woman)”  

  2. United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division (2017). World Population Prospects: The 2017 Revision, custom data acquired via website  

  3. Source: EIU database, accessed, July, 2017  

  4. Chinanews, “Sinopec to build 10 smart factories”  

  5. Xinhuanet, “Sneak peek into Midea’s smart factory: Automation and project excellence”  

  6. Cabinet Office, Government of Japan, Aging society [in Japanese]  

  7. Mizuho Bank, Ltd., Industry Research Division, Mid-term outlook for Japanese industries [in Japanese], vol.39, no.2, 2012,  

  8. Japan Finance Corporation Research Centre, New business in the era of declining birth rate and aging population [in Japanese], no. 2015-4, June 23, 2015  

  9. Japanese Bankers Association, Financial businesses in society with declining birth rate and aging population to support economic growth [in Japanese], March 2015 

  10. Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, Welfare and labour [in Japanese], October 2016  

  11. The Economic Survey, 2016-17, and Aiyar and Mody, “The demographic dividend: Evidence from the Indian States”  

  12. Nisha Agarwal, Inequality in India: What’s the real story?, World Economic Forum, https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/10

  13. /inequality-in-india-oxfam-explainer/ 

  14. Pankaj Doval, “Up to 40 per cent IT staff need reskilling: Nasscom,” Economic Times, and Nasscom, Jobs and skills: The imperative to reinvent and disrupt   

  15. National Development Council, ROC, 中華民國人口推估 (105年至150年), p.1, accessed July 7, 2017  

  16. Directorate General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics, ROC, Economic growth, national statistics, accessed July 6, 2017  

  17. The Economist Intelligent Unit, “Taiwan unveils new long-term care services programme,” accessed July 7, 2017  

  18. Chun-Hung A. Lin, Suchandra Lahiri, and Ching-Po Hsu, Population aging and regional income inequality in Taiwan: A spatial dimension, Social Indicators Research, 122(3), pp. 757–777  

  19. Ministry of the Interior, ROC, Work age population and elderly population內政統計查詢網, accessed July 6, 2017  

  20. Directorate General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics, ROC, “Economic growthnational statistics,”  

  21. The Economist Intelligent Unit, “Taiwan unveils new long-term care services programme,” Executive Yuan, ROC, Asia Silicon Valley Development Plan, accessed July 8, 2017  

  22. Ibid  

  23. Ibid  

  24. Executive Yuan, ROC (2017), Asia Silicon Valley Development Plan driving industrial upgrades and transformation [online], accessed July 11, 2017  

  25. 潘姿羽 (2017) “亞洲矽谷攻物聯網 六路出擊‘, 聯合新聞網,” accessed July 10, 2017 

  26. Financial Supervisory Commission, ROC, 行政院通過「金融科技創新驗條例」草案accessed July 10, 2017  

  27. Liberty Time Net, “張菁雅  ‘智慧機械推動辦公室成立 蔡英文賦予3任務’,” accessed July 9, 2017  

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  29. Defined as the ratio between the aged population (65 and over) and the working age population (15-64)  

  30. Asian Development Bank, Country Partnership Strategy: Thailand, 2013–2016[ebook], pp.1–3, accessed July 10, 2017  

  31. Bangkok: Thailand Board of Investment, Thailand 4.0 Means Opportunity Thailand[ebook], pp.1–3, accessed July 10, 2017  

  32. UN population data  

  33. Time, TIME special report: The world at 7 billion, accessed August 1, 2017  

  34. B. Vera, “World Bank: Filipinos living in urban areas to double to 102M by 2050,” Newsinfo.inquirer.net, accessed July 10, 2017 

  35. Karim Raslan, “How outsourcing transformed the Philippine middle class,” Business Insider, December 29, 2016  

  36. Asian Development Bank, Increasing equality, managing rural-urban transitions, investing in sustainable infrastructure keys to unlocking prosperity in Asia Pacific, accessed July 10, 2017  

  37. A. Aaron Lozada, “Duterte signs EO on 25-year plan to eliminate poverty,” ABS-CBN News, accessed July 10, 2017  

  38. L. Revolvy, “Islam in the Philippines,” Revolvy.com, accessed July 10, 2017 

  39. Thanh Nien Daily, “Vietnam's rapid aging population a new challenge,” accessed July 10, 2017  

  40. UNFPA, accessed July 10, 2017  

  41. SITEC Academy, Where are consumers introduced to new products in Southeast Asia?accessed July 10, 2017  

  42. The Malay Mail, “Growth of the Halal industry,” accessed July 10, 2017 

  43. The standard measure of inequality, the Gini coefficient declined from 0.46 in 2004 to 0.40 in 2014 based on analysis by the Development Research Group (DECRG)  

  44. Khazanah Research Institute View in article

  45. World Economic Forum, How can Malaysia reduce inequality?, accessed July 10, 2017  

  46. Kamles Kumar, “Racial discrimination in Malaysia growing despite Putrajaya’s efforts,” Sg.news.yahoo.com, accessed July 10, 2017  

  47. Diag, accessed July, 2017  

  48. Digital News Asia, “Universal Robots doubles distribution network to meet growing demand for collaborative robots,” accessed July 11, 2017  

  49. Singapore: National Population and Talent Division, A Sustainable Population for a Dynamic Singapore: Population White Paper [ebook], pp.9-13, accessed July 10, 2017  

  50. C. Yong, “Income inequality in Singapore lowest in a decade, monthly household income grows but at slower rate,” Straits Times, accessed July 10, 2017  

  51. M. Lomas, “Which Asian country will replace China as the 'world's factory'?” Diplomat, accessed July 10, 2017  

  52. S. Yusoof, F. Zuber, H. MNSR, N. Zamziba, and S. Toriry, “Wages of labour discrimination: Case study on Nike company, Indonesia,” International Journal of Academic Research in Public Policy and Governance, 4(1), pp.19–27, accessed July 10, 2017 

  53. S. Kemp, “The full guide to Southeast Asia’s digital landscape in 2017,” Techinasia.com, accessed July 10, 2017  

  54. Deloitte, Building the lucky country: Positioning for prosperity?  

  55. Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, “The importance of services trade to Australia”  

  56. Treasury, Australia, “Intergenerational report”  

  57. CSIRO, “Our top 10 achievements”