Seminar series Ageing democracies and the new electoral politics of economic stagnation Add to calendar 2025-01-15 12:00 2025-01-15 13:30 Europe/Rome Ageing democracies and the new electoral politics of economic stagnation Theatre Badia Fiesolana YYYY-MM-DD Print Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Send by email When 15 January 2025 12:00 - 13:30 CET Where Theatre Badia Fiesolana Organised by Department of Political and Social Sciences In the framework of the SPS Departmental Seminar Series, this session features a talk by Professor Tim Vlandas. Democracies have experienced profound population ageing in the last decades. Yet we still know little about the political consequences of ageing for economic performance. In this article, I develop a novel theoretical framework linking ageing to lower economic growth through two mechanisms: first, grey power pushes elected governments to expand old age policies thereby ‘crowding out’ more growth-enhancing policies; second, ageing populations weaken the electoral penalty for lower economic performance leading to ‘economic unaccountability’. Using microdata from four cross-national survey of preferences and vote choices, I show that elderly individuals care more about pensions, but less about education, childcare and family policies, and during elections they are less likely to penalize governments for low growth. Using macrodata on 21 advanced economies since the 1960s, OLS and instrumental variable regressions provide evidence that ageing leads to more spending on pensions policies but less on education, family, and childcare policies, as well as public investments, and lower growth. Ageing countries may paradoxically become economically inefficient because they are politically representative. Register Scientific Organiser(s): Waltraud Schelkle (European University Institute) Contact(s): Jennifer Rose Dari (EUI - Department of Political and Social Sciences) Speaker(s): Dr Tim Vlandas (University of Oxford)