Publication: The cost of aging: Economic growth perspectives for Europe
Type:
Article
Date
2023-06-23
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
PLOS ONE
Abstract
This study explores the causal relationship between the economy and the elderly population
in 15 European countries. The economy was measured by the Per Capita Gross Domestic
Product growth rate, while the population aged above 65 as a percentage of the total was
considered the elderly population. The data were obtained from a time series dataset published by the World Bank for six decades from 1961 to 2021. The Granger causality test was
employed in the study to analyse the impact between the economy and the elderly population. An alternate approach, wavelet coherence, was used to demonstrate the changes to the
relationship between the two variables in Europe over the 60 years. The findings from the
Granger causality test indicate a unidirectional Granger causality from the economy to the
elderly population for Luxembourg, Austria, Denmark, Spain, and Sweden, while vice versa
for Greece and the United Kingdom. Furthermore, for Belgium, Finland, France, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, and Turkey, Granger causality does not exist between the said variables. Moreover, wavelet coherence analysis depicts that for Europe, the elderly population
negatively affected the economic growth in the 1960s, and vice versa in the 1980s.
Description
Keywords
Economic growth, perspectives, Europe, cost of aging
Citation
: Jayawardhana T, Jayathilaka R, Nimnadi T, Anuththara S, Karadanaarachchi R, Galappaththi K, et al. (2023) The cost of aging: Economic growth perspectives for Europe. PLoS ONE 18(6): e0287207. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal. pone.0287207
