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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_2bf828b0-8eca-5d53-bde2-a88146154a3e">10, another warning about not ignoring people's behaviour. While modelling the behaviour of people at the individual and aggregate levels yields many insights, the complexity of the human psyche and resultant behaviour highlights the heterogeneity across people in families, groups, and countries. We need to better understand economics and finance in conjunction with psychology, philosophy, and politics, as Akerlof and Shiller emphasise.

      Trends at both the micro and macro levels testify to the impact of changing behaviour that results in observable changing core demographic characteristics such as increased life expectancy, lower population increases and growth, lower fertility rates (children born per woman), increased ratios of old to young people, and lower ratios of working-age people in the total population. These in turn also influence behaviour in terms of productivity of workers, movements of people from rural to urban areas, movements across countries (migration), and access to education, technology, and capital. Focus on age alone misses out on the fact that similar-aged people across different areas and countries exhibit different behaviour, as human behaviour is endogenous: it is different within different systems and institutional setups.

      A correlation exists between the recent slowdown of real GDP growth in advanced countries and the acceptance of immigrants into their labour force and/or citizen population. There are many countries that rely on pools of immigrant labour—some skilled and some unskilled—to meet their workforce requirements. Even within the same region, neighbouring countries have differing immigration policies and immigrant worker shares. Population change decomposes into natural population change (deaths minus births) and net immigration (immigration less emigration). Demographics affects and is affected by both internal and external migration policies. Internal migration from villages to towns to cities reflects the growing trend of urbanisation within countries. Urbanisation growth has been much more rapid in many of the emerging market countries, leading to a larger number of megacities in the developing world such as Sao Paolo, Rio de Janeiro, Shanghai, Mexico City, Lagos, Mumbai, Delhi, Beijing, Kolkata, Dhaka, and Lahore. We shall discuss urbanisation, immigration, and globalisation in later sections of the book.

      The later chapters as outlined in the preface, present data on the ongoing demographic changes, including a historical look back. The focus then is on the implications of those demographic changes on macroeconomic variables such as labour productivity, GDP growth, GDP per capita, inflation, interest rates, and public debt. Further discussion revolves around the effects of demographic changes on asset prices and asset allocation. Individual preferences toward risk and expected return influence the prices of assets. The rise of behavioural finance as a research area helps provide alternate explanations for many observed financial events and data.

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