How to fix the ageing crisis? Follow Australia,says world’s most influential investor

Business columnist

Opining about the world’s largest economic challenges is now an annual endeavour for Larry Fink,the founder of the world’s largest investment firm,BlackRock. This year,his crisis de jour has moved from climate change to funding the ageing population.

Unsurprisingly,there’s no shortage of self-serving answers inFink’s thesis on how to live in prosperity in retirement – given BlackRock is a company that invests the retirement savings of millions in the US and around the world and manages $15 trillion of other people’s money.

BlackRock chairman and chief executive Larry Fink has tackled our increasing longevity in his annual letter to investors.

BlackRock chairman and chief executive Larry Fink has tackled our increasing longevity in his annual letter to investors.Supplied

There is nothing new about our ever-improving life expectancy.

But what elevates the challenge of funding the ageing population to a new level is biotechnology. Last year,when two biotech companies cracked the code for close to eliminating obesity,the notion of old age changed.

Obesity and a raft of life-threatening conditions associated with it have been responsible for taking years off life expectancy.

Once weight loss drugs likeOzempic,Wegovy and their eventual imitatorsbecome more widespread, the maths on how to fund people in retirement gets far trickier and the problem becomes exponentially larger.

‘As a society,we focus a tremendous amount of energy on helping people live longer lives. But not even a fraction of that effort is spent helping people afford those extra years.’

Larry Fink

The next holy grail of medical breakthroughs – and one in which biotechs are investing billions – is a cure for degenerative brain diseases like Alzheimer’s. Some in the field are now suggesting this won’t be too far off,either.

These breakthroughs underscore a frustrating irony,according to Fink:“As a society,we focus a tremendous amount of energy on helping people live longer lives. But not even a fraction of that effort is spent helping people afford those extra years.”

Living longer has myriad flow-on issues from a societal perspective,including how this affects younger generations. The discord that has emerged between the relatively prosperous generation of Baby Boomers and the younger generationshas been well documented.

Fink says Millennials and Gen Zs are economically anxious. There are two obvious reasons:the first is that the younger generations are now the economically productive members of the workforce that are carrying the burden of supporting a growing number of economically unproductive retirees.

Secondly,in generations past,retirees would have died earlier and passed what assets remained on to their children. Now,as people are dying later,they will use more of their savings to support themselves and leave less to their children,who may not inherit until they are middle aged.

“It’s no wonder younger generations,Millennials and Gen Z,are so economically anxious,” Fink says. “They believe my generation – the Baby Boomers – have focused on their own financial wellbeing to the detriment of who comes next. And in the case of retirement,they’re right.”

Today in America,for those still working,the retirement message the government and companies tell their workers is effectively:“You’re on your own.”

Fink says the Baby Boomers still in positions of corporate and political leadership have an obligation to change that.

Australians on paid parental leave will receive superannuation payments under a new plan from the Albanese Government.

One result of all of this is an increasingly disillusioned cohort of younger people. Fink says no single piece of data has disturbed him more than that contained in a piece inThe Wall Street Journal that said the current cohort of young Americans is 50 per cent more likely to question whether life has a purpose,while 40 per cent agreed with the statement that it is hard to have hope for the world,compared with 20 years ago.

The lack of retirement savings is a scourge for the US economy,and Fink’s message is to think about pushing out the retirement age from 65 or having a better system of enabling workers to save incrementally during their working life to fund their retirement.

Here he acknowledges the gold standard Australian superannuation model and the Netherlands’ more fluid response to demographic change.

The Dutch decided more than 10 years ago to gradually raise the retirement age. It will now automatically adjust as the country’s life expectancy changes.

In Australia,employers must contribute a portion of income for every worker between the ages of 18 and 70 into a retirement account,which then belongs to the employee. The Superannuation Guarantee was introduced in 1992 when the country seemed like it was on the path to a retirement crisis.

Thirty-two years later,Australians probably have more retirement savings per capita than people in any other country. The nation has the world’s 54th-largest population but the fourth-largest retirement system.

“Australia’s experience with super could be a good model for American policymakers to study and build on. Some already are,” Fink says.

Needless to say,if the US had a national retirement system like ours,BlackRock’s $15 trillion under management would stand to get a lot larger.

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Elizabeth Knight comments on companies,markets and the economy.

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