The headlines are stark, but the numbers are starker. Global fertility rates have hit record lows, and the market is taking note. This is not a social trend to be viewed through the rose-tinted spectacles of cultural commentary. This is a structural shift with profound implications for gilt yields, inflation expectations, and the very fabric of fiscal sustainability. Let me put it bluntly: fewer babies mean fewer future workers, lower productivity growth, and an eventual collision with the welfare state.
Consider the data. The global total fertility rate has fallen from 5.0 in 1950 to 2.4 today, and is now below the replacement level of 2.1 in most developed economies. South Korea’s rate of 0.72 is a canary in the coal mine. Japan, Italy, Spain all languish well below replacement. Even the United States, long a demographic outlier, has slipped below 1.7. This is not a blip. This is a permanent shift in the human capital ledger.
The bond market is already pricing in the implications. Lower fertility means slower potential GDP growth, which in turn weighs on natural interest rates. The German 10-year Bund yield, already negative for much of the past decade, reflects a market that expects stagnation, not dynamism. In the UK, gilt yields have been range-bound as the market discounts a future of low growth and high dependency ratios. The Bank of Japan’s eternal struggle to reflate its economy is a direct consequence of a shrinking workforce. If you think central bank policy is the driver, think again. Demographics are the tide that lifts or sinks all boats.
But the more immediate concern for markets is fiscal. A shrinking tax base combined with rising healthcare and pension costs is a recipe for sovereign debt stress. The International Monetary Fund has warned that ageing populations could push public debt to unsustainable levels across advanced economies. Capital flight from high-debt nations is a rational response. The market will demand a risk premium from countries that fail to address these imbalances. Investors should be watching the trajectory of France’s debt-to-GDP ratio, Japan’s grotesque 250% figure, and the UK’s own rising path.
Inflation, meanwhile, may be a more complex story. In the short term, labour shortages could push up wages, driving cost-push inflation. But without productivity gains, this is just a tax on growth. In the long term, demographic decline is deflationary. Fewer consumers mean less aggregate demand. The Bank of England should be wary of assuming the inflation genie is back in the bottle. The structural deflationary forces from demographics are powerful.
Policy responses are thin on the ground. Pro-natalist policies have been tried, and have largely failed. Hungary’s baby-bonus schemes moved the needle only modestly. Singapore’s cash incentives have been a waste of fiscal resources. Perhaps the only effective lever is immigration, but that is politically toxic across the West. Without it, the shrinkage is baked in.
For the investor, this means a long-term shift away from growth-dependent assets. The classic 60/40 portfolio may need rethinking. Sovereign bonds will probably offer low real returns, if not outright negative. Equities in countries with favourable demographics, such as India or parts of Africa, will command a premium. But the safety of developed market bonds is an illusion when the long-term buyer base of future workers is dwindling.
In conclusion, the global population crisis is not a slow-burn story. It is a ticking time bomb for fiscal accounts, a drag on potential growth, and a challenge to the core assumptions of modern welfare states. The market has yet to fully price this in. When it does, expect volatility. The bottom line is simple: fewer people mean fewer economic agents. The consequences are as inevitable as compound interest.







