Macroscope | Demographics to challenge inequality and asset values

Relatively scarce labour may in the next decades reverse some of the huge trends of the last three: rising inequality, and falling real interest rates and wages.
The upshot for asset markets may be equally profound, challenging the central place government bonds hold at the core of investment portfolios as well as the value of equities.
The rise of China, the integration of the global economy and the opening of the economies of Eastern Europe have coincided with, and likely driven, rising economic inequality in the developed world, as well as falling real wages and interest rates.
The beneficiaries, as noted by French economist Thomas Piketty, have been the owners of capital, with falling interest rates driving higher bond returns and record corporate profits.
Negative demographics should in theory lower growth and reduce savings
A new report by economists at Morgan Stanley and consultant Charles Goodhart, formerly a member of the interest rate-setting panel at the Bank of England, argues that what demographic trends have driven, demographic trends can also take away.