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Asia’s ageing population could deliver a ‘silver dividend’

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Asia’s ageing population could deliver a ‘silver dividend’

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The writer is chief economist of the Asian Development Bank. Aiko Kikkawa, senior economist at ADB and the lead author of ‘Aging Well in Asia, also contributed

The rapid ageing of societies across Asia and the Pacific doesn’t just raise the question of who will pay for higher pension costs. It also poses the challenge of how to meet increasing physical and mental healthcare needs.

The number of people over 60 in the region is expected to double over the next few decades. Today, on average, 57 per cent of this group have at least one noncommunicable disease — the most common are hypertension, diabetes, and heart disease — yet only four in 10 receive regular check-ups. Nearly a third experience elevated depressive symptoms, with many saying they feel isolated or lonely.

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By 2050, the number of people in this age group will surge to 1.2bn, or about a quarter of the population in developing Asia and the Pacific. This demographic shift is unprecedented in its speed, fuelled by steep declines in fertility rates and occurring at an earlier stage of development than in advanced economies. While greater longevity reflects the region’s successful socio-economic development, it also presents increasingly urgent challenges.

Paramount is how to ensure the wellbeing of the soaring number of older people. Health is the most critical dimension of wellbeing, because it directly affects quality of life. But it is also key for other aspects, such as productive work, economic security, and family and social life. 

Health and long-term care services will need to be expanded. This is likely to be expensive — although the experience of advanced countries shows that budget resources can be increased by mobilising more tax revenue and promoting growth-oriented spending. Over time, greater investment in healthcare can contribute to a “silver dividend” as a healthier population of older people will be more productive and require less care. In fact, the Asian Development Bank estimates that the current untapped work capacity of older persons could increase GDP by up to 1.5 per cent in some Asian economies.

Moreover, significant health and economic benefits can accrue through disease prevention. Community-based programmes have achieved promising results in lessening tobacco use, blood pressure control, diabetes management and health screening. Promoting physical activity and healthy food and diets can also minimise the burden of disease.

Beyond healthcare policies, policymakers must also tackle related challenges such as pervasive informal employment and stark gender inequality. Informal workers enjoy little or no protections at work; many have no choice but to keep working until their health fails.

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Women can expect to live longer than men but are more prone to disease, and depressive symptoms with 59 per cent of older women in Asia and the Pacific suffering from at least one noncommunicable disease. At the same time, older women may have fewer resources than their male counterparts to access healthcare because their economic opportunities are constrained, and they have less access to pensions.

These challenges are interconnected, requiring governments in Asia and the Pacific to take a comprehensive approach. A top priority should be to increase pension coverage and ensure adequate benefits for the poorest. 

Policies can also make it easier for older people to work, for instance by offering incentives for employers to hire and retain older workers and adapt work patterns. Outdated statutory retirement ages can be increased over time and made more flexible. Remuneration based on seniority, prevalent in many regional economies, can be reformed to make wages better reflect the productivity of older workers.

Governments can and must also do more to empower their citizens to plan and prepare for old age. Policies should focus on life-long preparation — encouraging not only healthy lifestyles, but also continuous learning to update skills and acquire new ones, and long-term financial planning for retirement. Early investments will be key to success.

The cost of inaction is high, ranging from the unhappiness of older citizens to widening inequality and lack of social cohesion, and eventually to soaring health and pension costs. The potential reward is that future generations of older people will live longer, healthier, and more productive lives.

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It’s time for governments to ensure that people throughout Asia and the Pacific can realise their aspirations to live well by ageing well.

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17,000 AT&T workers across the Southeast strike over contract negotiations

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17,000 AT&T workers across the Southeast strike over contract negotiations

An AT&T logo adorns a worker’s van on April 1 in Miami, Fla.

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More than 17,000 AT&T workers across the Southeast are on strike after accusing company management of “unfair labor practices” during recent contract negotiations.

A statement released Friday by the Communications Workers of America (CWA) — the union representing the striking employees — said AT&T did not bargain in good faith and sent negotiators who didn’t have any authority to make decisions.

“Our union entered into negotiations in a good faith effort to reach a fair contract, but we have been met at the table by company representatives who were unable to explain their own bargaining proposals and did not seem to have the actual bargaining authority required by the legal obligation to bargain in good faith,” said CWA District 3 Vice President Richard Honeycutt.

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“Our members want to be on the job, providing the quality service that our customers deserve. It’s time for AT&T to start negotiating in good faith so that we can move forward towards a fair contract.”

The union said it had filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board.

The striking workers include technicians, customer service representatives, and AT&T wire installation workers.

In a statement to NPR on Saturday, AT&T denied the company was breaking any labor laws and said it’s eager to negotiate a new contract.

“CWA’s claims of unfair labor practices are not grounded in fact,” the company said. “We have been engaged in substantive bargaining since day 1 and are eager to reach an agreement that benefits our hard-working employees.”

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AT&T cited three other agreements reached this year with 13,000 employees in other states as evidence that it was committed to reaching a deal.

The company also said customers shouldn’t have to worry about any service disruptions and that it had backup measures in place to keep operations running smoothly.

The strike affects workers in nine states, including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee.

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Musk’s X to shut Brazilian operation in escalating clash with country’s supreme court

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Musk’s X to shut Brazilian operation in escalating clash with country’s supreme court

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Elon Musk’s X on Saturday escalated its war of words with Brazil’s supreme court over alleged censorship and vowed to shut down its local operation “immediately”, in the billionaire’s latest intervention on the global stage.

In a post on X, the social media company alleged that on Friday Justice Alexandre de Moraes threatened its legal representative in the country with arrest for not complying with a “secret order” to take down certain accounts. 

A letter attached to the post, which X said was the court order, instructs the individual to implement the measures within 24 hours or risk a fine and imprisonment.

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The court said neither it nor the judge would comment on the matter. 

“Despite our numerous appeals to the Supreme Court not being heard, the Brazilian public not being informed about these orders and our Brazilian staff having no responsibility or control over whether content is blocked on our platform, Moraes has chosen to threaten our staff in Brazil rather than respect the law or due process,” X’s global government affairs account wrote. 

“As a result, to protect the safety of our staff, we have made the decision to close our operation in Brazil, effective immediately.”

X remains accessible in Brazil, the company said. It was unclear how many staff it had in the region. 

Musk posted on X: “No question that Moraes needs to leave. Having a ‘justice’ who repeatedly and egregiously violates the law is no justice at all.”

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The high-profile intervention ratchets up the tension between the supreme court and Musk, a clash that has become emblematic of the billionaire entrepreneur’s recent weigh-ins on foreign politics through the platform he bought for $44bn.

In recent years, Musk, a self-declared free speech absolutist, has increasingly sided with rightwing politicians globally, throwing his support behind Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and championing Argentina’s populist leader Javier Milei. 

This has intensified recently, with Musk attacking the UK government for its handling of anti-immigrant rioting, and trading barbs with Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro, resulting in the platform being blocked in the country by the authoritarian socialist for 10 days. 

While Musk’s commentary has won him fans among Brazil’s conservatives, some lawmakers and analysts fear his interventions could stoke unrest. 

The Tesla and SpaceX chief first took aim at de Moraes earlier this year over the supreme court’s request to take down what are believed to be rightwing accounts, and called on the judge to “resign or be impeached”. 

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In response, de Moraes ordered an investigation into Musk — who threatened to disobey the court orders — for suspected obstruction of justice. Musk reignited the spat this week by repeating claims of censorship, after X’s government affairs account posted a document purportedly sent by de Moraes ordering the platform to block certain users.

De Moraes has spearheaded a judicial crackdown against online disinformation, but is a controversial figure who divides opinion in Latin America’s largest democracy. 

Supporters say he helped secure democracy in the face of attacks on the reliability of the country’s electronic voting system by former president Jair Bolsonaro, ahead of his unsuccessful re-election campaign in 2022. However, followers of the hard-right populist allege the judge has curbed freedom of expression and unfairly targeted conservatives.  

Brazil’s supreme court has faced discontent from the far-right movement and been accused of over-reach by critics. Its premises were among the government buildings ransacked in January 2023 by radical Bolsonaro backers who claimed, without evidence, that the election result was rigged in favour of winner Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. 

“We are deeply saddened that we have been forced to make this decision. The responsibility lies solely with Alexandre de Moraes,” X said on Saturday. “His actions are incompatible with democratic government. The people of Brazil have a choice to make — democracy, or Alexandre de Moraes.”

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Additional reporting by Beatriz Langella

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Trump campaign reset goes awry in Pennsylvania as he attacks Harris

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Trump campaign reset goes awry in Pennsylvania as he attacks Harris

Donald Trump tried to reset his campaign at a rally in battleground Pennsylvania on Saturday as polls show Kamala Harris pulling ahead in key swing states.

But the former president quickly broke away from the prepared speech about economic issues to launch personal attacks on Harris including accusations that her agenda is both communist and fascist, and that she has “the laugh of a crazy person”.

Trump’s written speech before a mostly filled 8,000-seat indoor arena in Wilkes-Barre focussed on economic policy. Some Republican strategists had hoped the former president could regain the initiative by zeroing in on issues on which opinion polls say voters have greater trust in Trump than the Democrats, such as inflation.

Trump attacked Harris as part of the Biden administration for the surge in prices that has hit many Americans hard and described increased household costs as “the Kamala Harris inflation tax”.

“She was there for everything,” he said in attempting to pin Biden’s policies on her.

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Trump also likened Harris’s pledge on Friday to tackle high grocery costs by targeting profiteering by food corporations, and to bring down housing and prescription drug costs, to the Soviet Union’s economic system.

“In her speech yesterday, Kamala went full communist,” he said. “Comrade Kamala announced that she wants to institute socialist price controls. You saw that never worked before … It will cause rationing, hunger and skyrocketing prices.”

Trump in Wilkes-Barre today. Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

The former president challenged voters to ask themselves whether they were “better off with Kamala and Biden than you were under President Donald J Trump”, a question that many in Pennsylvania might answer in his favour.

But the impact was soon lost as Trump once again veered repeatedly away from the script with rambling discourses from immigration to China and trans people, often based on outright falsehoods.

At one point, he even acknowledged that was what he was doing.

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“They’ll say he was rambling. I don’t ramble. I’m a really smart guy, you know, really smart. I don’t ramble. But the other day, anytime I hit too hard, they say he was rambling, rambling,” he said.

The audience, some wearing T-shirts proclaiming “I’m voting for a convicted felon” and chanting “Fight, fight, fight” in reference to the former president’s words shortly after he narrowly escaped an assassination attempt last month, urged Trump on.

When he returned to the script, Trump attacked Harris for her previous opposition to fracking, an unpopular stance in Pennsylvania, which is a major fracker, but he will not have helped himself in the Rust belt by saying he would cut spending on infrastructure such as renewing bridges and roads, which has provided jobs in the region.

Trump also challenged Harris’s legitimacy as the Democratic presidential candidate, describing it as “a coup” against Biden.

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“Joe Biden hates her. This was an overthrow of a president,” he said.

Trump confused some in the audience with what appeared to be a claim that if Harris could become the candidate without a primary election, then so should he because he is so popular among Republicans.

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“I said, so why are we having an election? They didn’t have an election. Why are we having an election?” he said.

Trump described Harris’s decision to pass over Pennsylvania’s governor, Josh Shapiro, as her running mate, as antisemitism in an apparent reference to debate about whether Shapiro’s support for Israel, including work for the Israel embassy in the past, would damage the Democratic campaign because of the war in Gaza .

“They turned him down because he’s Jewish. That’s why they turned him down. Now, we can be politically correct and not say that. I could say, well, they turned him down for various reasons. No, no, they turned him down because he’s Jewish,” said Trump.

“And I’ll tell you this, any Jewish person that votes for her or a Democrat has to go out and have their head examined.”

Through it all, Trump repeatedly returned to personal attacks on Harris, including a bizarre discourse on how she laughs, a mannerism that has proven popular among many younger voters in particular.

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“Have you heard her laugh? That is the laugh of a crazy person. That is the laugh of a crazy, the laugh of a lunatic,” he said.

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