Ageing Population Taxes Minds in Geneva
By Adam Beaumont, Swissinfo
Switzerland
November 5, 2006
The opportunities and challenges posed by an ageing society will be under
discussion at a series of conferences in Geneva this week, starting on
Monday.
Academics, government officials and
economists will address issues such as the consequences for the labour
market, the welfare system, society and the economy.
Like global warming, demographic
changes that will see a big increase in the number over:65s in the coming
decades tend to be viewed as a "ticking time bomb" menacing
society.
Frequent concerns include: Will
pensions shrivel under the strain? Can the welfare system cope? And will
the retirement age have to be raised?
But the weeklong lecture series at
Geneva University, which is being hosted by the non:profit kogita
association, also intends to put the accent on the benefits an ageing
society can bring.
"I wouldn't say it is a time
bomb. There will be changes but the question is: will they be very painful
or just painful, or can they be manageable," Pierre Allan, dean of
the university's faculty of economic and social sciences, told swissinfo.
"There will also be
opportunities with more people who are older and wiser. As scientific
studies have shown, people who are more mature are happier to do something
for their families, neighbours and society as a whole. You have to find
ways to provide non:market solutions for these people, because they want
to help."
Pooling resources
Speaking ahead of this week's lecture
series, organiser Geneviève Brunet said Geneva could become a centre of
expertise for research into ageing.
The city is home to the World Health
Organization, the International Labour Organization, plus non:governmental
organisations working in the fields of social security and insurance.
But at present the various fields of
expertise are disjointed. "There is a critical mass but the efforts
are fragmented," admitted Allan.
The Geneva University professor noted
that Switzerland, like Britain and a number of Nordic countries, was
already getting to grips with the issue of ageing.
Pension system
He said the Swiss were ahead of the
game with their "three-pillar" pension system-state,
occupational and private. And while a proposal by Interior Minster Pascal
Couchepin to raise the retirement age to 67 caused an outcry, it did grab
the public's attention.
"There are some things that are
still taboo and that's understandable," said Allan. "But this
was further evidence that you have to find solutions to problems which are
not yet upon us but in the medium and long term will definitely be with
us."
"I think public awareness is
improving but in terms of people who see ageing as a threat rather than as
a solution to some social problems," he added.
According to figures published by the
Federal Statistics Office in July, the number of people over 65 in
Switzerland will almost double by 2050.
By then there will be only two people
of working age to support each pensioner, while the current rate is four
to one.
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