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Texto de 
Megan McArdle, no The Atlantic, alerta que os problemas econômicos da Europa não são fundamentados nas políticas econômicas que inibem o crescimento, mas na demografia. É a cultura da morte, estúpido! (métodos contraceptivos), tão bem detalhada na encíclica 
Evangelium Vitae do papa João Paulo II. 
Leiam abaixo: 
Europe’s Real Crisis
A
ll of us can breathe easy now: policy makers and analysts finally agree on how to fix Europe’s problems.
“Europe Debt Crisis Plan Hinges on Economic Growth,” declared the 
Los Angeles Times  in October, after finance ministers announced what felt like the  hundredth plan to seriously, no-foolin’-this-time, really rescue the  European Union’s illiquid and insolvent states.
“Countries have to undergo significant structural reforms that  would revamp growth,” said Mario Draghi, the head of the European  Central Bank, in a December interview with the 
Financial Times. 
“Austerity is not enough, even for budgetary discipline, if  economic activity does not pick up a decent rate of growth,” Italian  Prime Minister Mario Monti told 
The Economist in January.
Their words have been echoed in a thousand or more op-eds, policy  briefs, and TV spots, for good reason. Growth could fix so many dire  fiscal and political problems—not just in Europe, but all over the  developed world.
If only economic growth could be delivered on demand, like a pizza,  just minutes after we realize we want it. Unfortunately, growth (or at  least the sustainable variety) is typically a long time in the baking,  and dependent on two main ingredients: more workers and higher worker  productivity. And much of Europe is short on the former. That has big  implications for Europe’s future.
Consider Italy. It is no exaggeration to say that the fate of Italy  is the fate of the euro zone: if Italy can keep its debt under control  and its banking system solvent, the euro zone will probably make it; if  Italy defaults, the resulting panic will probably force Portugal,  Ireland, Greece, and Spain to follow suit.
This linchpin is under a great deal of strain. Italy’s public debt  stands at $2.3 trillion, roughly 20 percent larger than the country’s  GDP. If not for that debt, Italy would have run a slight budget surplus  in 2011. But interest payments alone soaked up nearly 5 percent of the  GDP, creating a deficit of about 3.6 percent of national income and  increasing the debt even more.
This has left Italy incredibly vulnerable. For every percentage  point that the interest rate on the debt increases, Italians have to  divert another 1.2 percent of national income into debt payments. And  because markets are worried about this problem, interest rates have been  rising at a brisk clip, with only occasional pauses while the powers  that be deploy yet another emergency rescue plan.
Sweating this debt down by austerity alone would take ages, cause  immense suffering among people who depended on the cut services, and—as  Greece has shown—draw fierce public opposition. Moreover, commentators  like Paul Krugman argue that it would actually make the problem worse in  the short term, because government austerity makes the economy  contract. As they see it, trying to close Europe’s fiscal gaps with  austerity alone is like trying to get out of a deep hole by digging  harder.
Strong growth by Europe’s troubled debtor nations would of course  offer a different, and less painful, way out. After all, if you make  $30,000 a year, a $10,000 credit-card balance is crippling; but if you  make $300,000 a year, it’s fairly trivial. The faster Italy’s economy  expands, the more manageable Italy’s debt becomes.
But that’s where the dearth of workers comes into play. Everyone  agrees that rapid growth would be much nicer than higher taxes and  slashed pension payments. The hitch is that over the past five years,  growth in the Italian economy hasn’t averaged even 1 percent a year.  Soaring growth will be tough to achieve, because more and more Italians  are getting too old to work—and fewer and fewer Italians have been  having the babies needed to replace them.
Italy’s fertility rate has actually been inching up from its 1995  low of 1.19 children for every woman, but it is still only about  1.4—well below the number needed to replenish its population (2.1). As a  result, even with some immigration, Italy’s population growth has been  very slow. It will soon stall, and eventually go into reverse. And then,  one by one, the rest of Europe’s nations will follow. Not one country  on the Continent has a fertility rate high enough to replace its current  population. Heavy debt and a shrinking population are a very bad  combination.
S
ince the invention of  birth control and antibiotics, country after country has gone through a  fairly standard shift. First, the mortality rate drops, especially  among the young and the aging, and that quickly translates into a bigger  workforce. Then, birthrates drop, as families realize that they no  longer need to birth a basketball team to ensure that a couple members  will survive to adulthood. A falling birthrate means that parents can  invest more in each child; with fewer mouths to feed, more and better  food can nourish each of them, and children can spend more years in  school, causing worker productivity to rise from one generation to the  next. As the burden of bearing and rearing children lightens, mothers  can do more work outside the home, boosting both household resources and  the national economy.
In 1984, when Ronald Reagan spoke of “morning in America,” he was  at least demographically accurate. The youngest members of America’s  vast Baby Boom were in college; the oldest were on the brink of their  peak earning power. America was about to reap what the economists David  Bloom and David Canning have dubbed the “demographic dividend” of rising  labor supply and productivity. Bloom and Canning’s analysis of East  Asia and Ireland attributes a substantial fraction of the recent  economic booms in those places to this dividend.
But the dividend does not last forever. Eventually, the baby bulge  reaches retirement age, the labor force stops growing, and older workers  start spending their savings, depleting the nation’s supply of capital.  The virtuous cycle turns vicious. This is what is happening right now  in much of southern Europe.
I
s strong growth still  possible once the demographic dividend has been paid out? Of course it  is, at least in theory. Even if the workforce isn’t expanding,  strong-enough gains in worker productivity can substantially lift the  economy. Longer hours and longer careers can theoretically have the same  effect. But it is far from clear that in practice, these solutions will  work, given the advanced age of Europe’s workers.
To see why, picture two neighboring towns, sharing all the same  infrastructure and economic opportunities, with one key difference:  their median age. In the first town, which I’ll call Morningburg, the  average resident is 28. In the second, which I’ll call Twilight City,  the average householder is 58.
Research indicates that even with all the same resources at their  disposal, these two places look very different, and not just because  one’s grocery store does a booming business in diapers while the other’s  has a whole aisle devoted to Centrum Silver.
In Morningburg, young workers are rapid, plastic learners, eager to  try out new ways of doing things. Since they’re still hoping to make a  name for themselves and maybe get rich, they take a lot of risks. They  push their managers to expand into new markets, propose iffy but  innovative product lines, maybe start their own firm if the boss won’t  let them advance fast enough. For the right opportunity, they’ll put in  18-hour days for a year or more.
In Twilight City, time horizons are shorter—people aren’t looking  for projects that will make them rich or famous 20 years from now. They  are interested in conserving what they have. That’s mostly rational,  given Twilighters’ life stage; but studies show that older people worry  more than younger ones about losses and are therefore especially averse  to risk. Twilighters also tire more easily and need more time off for  illness, so hours worked slowly decline each year. Wages stay steady,  however; Twilighters, like most people, get very angry if you try to cut  their salary.
That makes Twilighters expensive—so when they lose a job, finding  another is tough. As a result, Twilighters tend to cling fiercely to  their positions, and may block younger workers from getting a foothold  in the labor market.
The difficulty of reemployment contributes to Twilight City’s  surprisingly high, but somewhat deceptive, rate of entrepreneurship.  Looking closely, we find that businesses there are disproportionately  owned by semi-retirees who have hung out a consulting shingle, or become  part-time caterers, or invested in a hobby business like an antique  store. These businesses typically don’t have much growth potential, in  part because cautious Twilighters won’t (or can’t) borrow money for  expansion.
Morningburg is a boomtown, prone to periodic savage busts when the  young strivers realize that those fur-bearing-trout farms they invested  in aren’t going to make them rich. Twilight City is a less volatile  place—but little change also means little growth.
In theory, smart policy could make Twilight City look a little more  like Morningburg: public investment and forced savings could boost  research and business development; employment laws could be reformed to  make labor markets more flexible; heavy investments could be made in  education to improve the productivity of Twilight City’s few young  workers.
In practice, all of this is likely to be fiercely opposed by  Twilight City’s citizens, who tend to vote against change, particularly  if it threatens their pensions or health care. Many of the most vehement  public demonstrations in Europe over the past two decades have followed  attempts at pension reform.
I
t is somewhat ironic  that the first serious strains caused by Europe’s changing demographics  are showing up in the Continent’s welfare budgets, because the pension  systems themselves may well have shaped, and limited, Europe’s growth.  The 20th century saw international adoption of social-security systems  that promised defined benefits paid out of future tax revenue—known to  pension experts as “paygo” systems, and to critics as Ponzi schemes.  These systems have greatly eased fears of a destitute old age, but  multiple studies show that as social-security systems become more  generous (and old age more secure), people have fewer children. By one  estimate, 50 to 60 percent of the difference between America’s  (above-replacement) birthrate and Europe’s can be explained by the  latter’s more generous systems. In other words, Europe’s pension system  may have set in motion the very demographic decline that helped make  that system—and some European governments—insolvent.
Pension and other welfare benefits, promised long ago when the  workforce was expanding quickly, are at the heart of Europe’s current  fiscal convulsions, which are perhaps a harbinger of worse to come. In  David Canning’s view, the 2008 crash and its aftermath have merely moved  up a long-inevitable implosion by 10 to 15 years. European nations “had  unrealistic systems that were eventually going to cause a crisis,” he  told me.
These difficulties are why almost everyone who studies the  interaction of rich-world demographics and economic growth recommends  raising the retirement age and forcing people to save more on their own,  well before a debt crisis hits. “Aging is a good thing,” Canning says.  “It means health improvements and longer lives. We only think it’s a bad  thing because we’re trying to hang on to these institutions. We should  be welcoming these changes, but changing our institutions to match.” He  and Bloom, among others, are urging countries to use their demographic  dividends wisely—to reinvest them in the things that make their  workforces more productive. If they do that, perhaps living standards  can keep rising.
“There’s a big difference between aggregate GDP growth and per  capita GDP growth,” says Nick Eberstadt of the American Enterprise  Institute. “For personal well-being, what matters is per capita GDP  growth. You can certainly imagine a country with declining GDP but  increasing per capita well-being.”
You certainly can imagine it, but it seems hard to actually achieve  in a country with heavy national debt. If the population is shrinking  but the debt burden isn’t, then promises to bondholders will weigh ever  more heavily on each person. The government could default, of course,  but the resulting crisis would also depress growth.  
For the most part, Europe has already spent its demographic  dividend. And the recent inability of countries like Spain and Greece to  hit their deficit targets illustrates just how difficult coping with  financial and fiscal instability can be when growth fails to materialize  as expected. Neither voters nor employers were prepared to make the  necessary compromises—and as the endless, fractious negotiations over  Greek debt show, it is very hard to get them to adjust to reality, even  when the alternative is disastrous. We shouldn’t necessarily expect  people to become more resigned to compromise as time goes on—quite  possibly we should expect the opposite.
Southern Europe is already living in Twilight City. And those of us  who live in Morningburg or Afternoonville should pay close attention to  what happens next, because eventually, we’re all heading to that neck  of the woods. The United Nations estimates that by 2030, the number of  people older than 60 will be growing more than three times as fast as  the general population. By 2050, one in every five people will be over  60. In the developed world, the proportion will be more like one in  three. Europe (along with Japan) is at the forefront of an unprecedented  shift.
“The problem,” says Canning, “is that aging is a new thing. We know  quite well what the effects of going to low fertility are—but we’ve  never seen this sort of aging before, so it’s hard to make predictions.”  
One prediction is safe, however: aging will present challenges that, as of now, no nation has adequately prepared to face. 
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