The US economy, like much of the rest of the world, is headed into the teeth of what economists sometimes bloodlessly call the “demographic transition:” that is, birthrates are falling as life expectancies continue to rise, so that the population is on average aging. Melissa A. Kearney and Luke Pardue have edited a four-paper collection of essays on the subject in Demographic Headwinds: The Economic Consequences of Lower Birth Rates and Longer Lives (Aspen Economic Strategy Group, February 2026).
Some of the consequences are relatively well-known, like the effects on the federal budget as the share of the receiving Social Security and Medicare is on the rise, as discusses in “Low Fertility and Fiscal Sustainability: The Effects of Past and Future Fertility Rates on the US Federal Budget Outlook,” by Lisa Dettline and Luke Pardue. Effects on budgets of state and local governments have been less discussed, but as Jeffrey Clemens points out in “Implications of Low Fertility and Declining Populations for the Operations of US State and Local Governments”: “Education accounts for a substantial portion of direct expenditure by both [state and local] layers of government, at 19 and 38 percent, respectively. For states, this spending is primarily on higher education, while local governments spend primarily on K–12 education.” As the number of children declines, one challenge will be to shrink the physical and employment footprint of the K-12 sector.
But here, I’ll focus on two other implications of the US demographic transition that seem to me even less discussed. One is the shift in the age of workers, and in particular, the ways in which a rising number of older workers has contributed to large gaps between older and younger workers. Nicola Bianchi and Matteo Paradisi discuss “The Age Divide in the American Workplace.” They write:
In the late 1970s, workers over 50 earned roughly 35 percent more per week than workers under 30. Over the following four decades, this gap widened steadily, reaching a peak in the early 2010s, when older workers earned about 55 percent more. It has narrowed somewhat in the last decade, as the oldest baby boomers have begun to retire and leave the very top of the wage distribution, but even in 2024, older workers still earned 47 percent more per week than younger workers on average. And because working lives are now longer, with many employees remaining in senior roles well into their late sixties, there is little reason to expect this pay gap to return to the more modest levels observed in the 1970s without further intervention from firms or policymakers.
There are two additional pieces of evidence that describe how lopsided the career outcomes of younger and older workers have become over the past five decades. First, … over time, younger workers have become considerably more likely than their 1970s counterparts to be in the bottom quarter of the wage distribution and less likely to be in the top quarter. For workers over 50, the pattern is broadly reversed. Relative to 1976, their probability of being in the bottom quartile has gradually fallen, reaching around 15–17 percent below its baseline level during the 2010s, while their probability of being in the top quartile has typically been between 5 and 15 percent higher.
Second, older workers have pulled further ahead of younger workers in access to desirable, higher-paying managerial jobs, as displayed in figure 4. In the mid-1970s, workers over 50 were about 5 percentage points more likely than workers under 30 to be employed in management occupations in the top quarter of the wage distribution. By 2024, this gap had widened to almost 8.3 percentage points. Over the same period, these higher-paying managerial roles grew from just over 5 percent to a little more than 7 percent of full-time private-sector jobs. Therefore, the inability of younger workers to capture a larger share of these positions was not simply due to a shrinking number of these career opportunities.
In conclusion, at a time when their numbers in the labor force were rising dramatically, older workers increasingly occupied higher-paying jobs and leadership positions. Younger workers, by contrast, faced declining representation at the top and limited access to managerial pathways. Bianchi and Paradisi (2024) show that these patterns are common to most high-income economies, rather than being unique to the United States.
My strong suspicion is that these patterns help to explain why so many young adults feel grim about the state of the US economy. They are, in fact, further behind their parents’ generation. Also, there is a considerable body of evidence that lower earnings earlier in life will continue to echo through a lifetime.
Another less-discussed aspect of the US demographic transition is a claim I’ve heard a few times that “at least lower population growth will reduce environmenal harms.” But this belief is not likely to be true, as Kevin Kuruc explains in “The Environmental Benefits of Low Fertility and Population Decline are Overstated“:
The discussion of impending population decline is often dismissed or minimized by arguments that downplay its urgency – or even welcome this development – because of the proposed environmental benefits. This paper argues that the environmental benefits of depopulation are far smaller than widely believed, and that complacency about population decline may be counterproductive to climate goals. First, there is a fundamental issue of timing mismatch. Demographic change unfolds over generations, while effective responses to emissions and environmental harm require immediate action. Second, effective climate strategies, such as carbon capture, require high fixed capital and labor costs. The smaller the economy, the larger the share of national income required to achieve climate goals. Beyond the climate, there is little evidence to suggest that increases in per-capita resource availability from depopulation would materially improve living standards, as modern natural-resource constraints on well-being are limited and declining. In contrast, sustainability depends on policy, human ingenuity, and fiscal capacity, none of which are aided by a shrinking and aging population.









