Japan's disappearing population

Japan invariably looms as the central case study for the economic and societal effects of rapid fertility decline, population decline and ageing. Japan is, measured by median age, the oldest country on earth, excluding the greying millionaires of Monaco and the some-5,000 people on British St. Helena. At the end of 2021, Japan had a median age of 48.4, well ahead of the second major country on the list, Italy, with a median age of 46.8. Japan is about to get older still. According to preliminary estimates, the country’s fertility rate fell further last year, albeit marginally, while the gap between births and deaths remained wide as ever. The number of live births fell by 5.0%, to 770.774, while deaths rose by 9.0%, to 1.57 million. Japan’s rapidly ageing population is the result of a quicker and more sustained post-1945 fertility transition than in other developed economies.

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Goldilocks

Someone has to say it, and it might as well be me. Markets have a distinct goldilocks feel about them at the moment, or in the words of the FT’s editors; markets are beginning to eye the “immaculate disinflation”, which is a prerequisite for a soft landing. This is a story about two trends; easing inflation and economies which are, well… neither too hot nor too cold. Soft US and UK inflation reports for the month of June have been key catalysts for the change in mood. Headline CPI inflation in the US fell to a two-year low of 3.0%, with core inflation dropping by 0.5pp, to 4.8%, a 20-month low. In the UK, meanwhile, headline inflation slipped to 7.9%, from 8.7% in May, while core inflation dipped by 0.2pp, to 6.9%. These numbers don’t exactly scream goldilocks, but markets trade at the margin of the economic data; it is the direction of travel that matters.

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Kinky economics - When must fiscal policy tighten to combat inflation?

The prevailing mood in global macro discussions seems to be as follows; inflation is past its peak, but it is set to remain a lot higher for a lot longer than initially anticipated, forcing central banks to continue hiking, keep rates higher for longer, or a combination of the two. The interest rate shock in the UK, as markets have adjusted their expectations for the BOE bank rate higher, and hawkish comments from the ECB are the two most obvious cases in point in developed markets. But a surprise hike by the Bank of Canada, and a larger-than-expected hike in Norway have added to the sentiment. We only really need the Fed to be forced into a hawkish turn to complete the narrative. This shift is important for investors. We are not just trying to calibrate when central banks will pause their hiking cycles—probably soon—but we’re also increasingly discussing, and pricing, how long rates will stay elevated, and whether central banks will have to resume hiking before they cut. Higher-for-longer, or #H4L, is already a trending hashtag on FinTwitter.

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