The Murder-Suicide of the Rentier: Population Aging and the Risk Premium

By Joseph Kopecky and Alan Taylor

http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:tcd:tcduee:tep1220&r=dge

Population aging has been linked to global declines in real interest rates. A similar trend is seen for equity risk premia, which are on the rise. An existing literature can explain part of the declining trend in safe rates using demographics, but has no mechanism to speak to trends in relative returns on different assets. We calibrate a heterogeneous agent life-cycle model with equity markets and aggregate risk, and we show that aging demographics can simultaneously account for both the majority of a downward trend in the risk free rate, while also increasing the return premium attached to risky assets. This is because the life-cycle savings dynamics that have been well documented exert less pressure on risky assets as older households shift away from risk. Under reasonable calibrations we find declines in the safe rate that are considerably larger than most existing estimates between the years 1990 and 2017. We are also able to account for most of the rise in the equity risk premium. Projecting forward to 2050 we show that persistent demographic forces will continue to push the risk free rate further into negative territory, while the equity risk premium remains elevated.

One more paper I highlight about the consequences of aging on asset markets. There is now a substantial body of literature that shows the inevitable changes in returns, yet I see nothing translated into actual recommendations to investors. Where is the disconnect? Or am I not looking at the right place?

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