The Aging State : How Fewer Workers, More Elderly, and AI Will Redesign Government
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Modern governments were designed for a world that no longer exists. They assumed growing populations, expanding workforces, and short retirements. Those assumptions are now breaking everywhere at once.
Across developed societies, birth rates have collapsed, populations are aging rapidly, and the ratio of workers to dependents is shrinking beyond what welfare states were built to sustain. Pension systems strain, healthcare costs surge, and public administrations face staffing shortages just as demand for services accelerates. Traditional policy tools no longer scale. Raising taxes, cutting benefits, or extending retirement ages only delays the underlying reckoning.
The Aging State examines how governments respond when demographic growth is no longer available as a solution. It shows how artificial intelligence and automation become structural necessities rather than optional upgrades, quietly replacing human administrators in welfare systems, healthcare management, taxation, compliance, and public decision-making. This shift is not driven by ideology or innovation alone, but by demographic math that leaves states with no alternative.
Drawing on demographic trends, economic constraints, and emerging governance practices, this book explains how the nature of government itself is changing. Authority becomes more algorithmic, administration more automated, and the relationship between citizens and the state increasingly mediated by systems rather than people.
The Aging State is a clear-eyed analysis of how governance adapts under demographic pressure. Written for readers who want to understand where public power is actually heading, it reveals how aging societies are redesigning the state to survive in a world with fewer workers, more elderly citizens, and rising dependence on artificial intelligence.