Find:
John Bryant (2003)
New Zealand Treasury Working Paper 03/04 June N Z T R E A S U R Y W O R K I N ...

Home More   Context Document   Related Tell A Friend Update

View or download from Source: http://www.treasury.govt.nz/wo ... rs/2003/twp03-04.pdf
Different Cached copies: PDF   PS.gz     PS     PNG Image   Compare   HTML
Other links:Update Update Cache   Help    Enter Author Homepages

Abstract:
Update
New Zealand has, by OECD standards, high birth rates. This has provided New Zealand with a relatively young population and continuing labour force growth. Both these features are, on many accounts, good for economic growth. Yet most discussions of New Zealand's economic performance and its prospects for moving up the OECD income distribution have paid little attention to demography. This paper defines "demography" narrowly as population size, growth, and age-structure, and examines the likely effects on New Zealand's growth rate in GDP per capita, relative to the rest of the OECD. The first part of the paper gives a broad overview of trends in population size and age structure in New Zealand and elsewhere in the OECD. The second part...

Similar documents based on text:
  More   All

1.2:  Robert A Buckle, Kunhong Kim and Nathan McLellan - New Zealand Treasury (2003)   (Update Update)
0.9:  N+, N WV,+5WAv W 5AWANA, - Nw Lh Tih (2001)   (Update Update)
0.7:  Population Ageing In New Zealand: Implications for Living.. - Ross Guest John (2003)   (Update Update)
0.7:  Modelling the Effect of Population Ageing on Government.. - John Bryant New (2003)   (Update Update)
0.7:  John Bryant - New Zealand Treasury (2003)   (Update Update)



BibTeX entry:
Update

@misc{ treasury-john,
  author = "New Zealand Treasury",
  title = "John Bryant" }


Citations (may not include all citations):

Citations not processed or no citations identified.


Rating Window
Rate this article:
(best)
 


 
Comment Window
Short Comment:
Comment More on this article
More about SMEALSearch   Submit documents   Feedback    


SMEALSearch
eBusiness Research Center (eBRC) | SMEAL College of Business | The Pennsylvania State University
SMEALSearch.org | People | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy

© 2000-2005 eBRC