The intergenerational report will prepare us for 2063 – but what exactly is it?
- Written by Michael Woods, Professor of Health Economics, University of Technology Sydney
Treasurer Jim Chalmers is preparing to release the Treasury’s sixth Intergenerational Report[1] on Thursday.
Whereas the first, in 2002, made projections out to 2042, this one will take us beyond the middle of the century, to 2062-63.
Already, Chalmers has spent some of the weekend pre-releasing headline numbers. More on those numbers later.
But first: what is the Intergenerational Report and why do we have it?
What is an intergenerational report?
Australia is one of many countries to produce such reports. They had their genesis in the 1980s, when much of the world became concerned that baby boomers (born in the years after the second world war) would be reaching older ages in the second decade of the 21st century.
At that time they would start leaving work and stop paying income tax.
But – and this was important – it was also the time they would also be needing more taxpayer-funded health care and aged care.