Demographics don’t just shape societies, they redirect capital. Defined as the system of goods, services, and infrastructure serving ageing populations, the ‘silver economy’ is expanding rapidly. Yet it remains undercapitalised in Europe’s investment landscape, with care-related and social infrastructure sectors receiving a fraction of the attention afforded to traditional infrastructure segments.
For decades, population growth and workforce expansion fuelled consumption, tax revenues, and pension schemes. But that demographic dynamic is eroding. Fertility rates are falling, life expectancy is rising, and the balance between workers and retirees is shifting. The global dependency ratio – the number of people not in the workforce compared to those who are – is increasing, which means that there will be fewer workers supporting a growing retired population in the coming years. Asset managers can’t afford to ignore what this means for capital allocation.
Indeed, the silver economy is opening long-term investment opportunities across healthcare, social infrastructure, mobility, and assisted living. At the same time, younger generations are growing increasingly disillusioned with public pension systems and are seeking self-driven, cost-effective investment vehicles to secure their financial futures.
The question is no longer whether ageing societies will reshape capital markets. It’s how asset managers will position themselves to capture these shifts, and where the next growth frontiers lie.
The silver economy’s capital gap
Despite the demographic shift underway, capital allocations to assets within the silver economy remain modest relative to its scale. Sectors like age-adapted housing, care infrastructure and assisted mobility are often treated as sub-themes within broader multi-asset funds, rather than standalone strategies.
In a recent white paper on the care economy, the World Economic Forum warns that care systems across the world are already unable to meet demand without significant new investments. Yet portfolios focused on alternatives still focus more on traditional infrastructure, risking misalignment with a major structural growth driver unfolding in plain sight. For now, exposure tends to sit within broader real asset strategies or multi-private asset funds, a blind spot that may widen if left unaddressed.
While vehicles focused on public markets, such as thematic ETFs, offer viable access routes to the silver economy, private markets are looking increasingly appealing. Investment structures such as the European Long-term Investment Fund (ELTIF) can connect long-term capital with the silver economy efficiently. The recent ELTIF 2.0 reform has expanded the reach of ELTIFs, now enabling greater retail access to private market investments. What’s needed now is sharper product design, stronger targeting, and the willingness to move before the space becomes crowded.
From pensions to personal capital
Younger people across Europe show limited trust and low engagement with public pension systems. The European Commission’s 2024 Pension Adequacy Report highlights that younger workers face declining projected replacement rates and growing uncertainty about future pension entitlements. These trends, combined with limited financial literacy and persistent gender gaps, may be discouraging younger adults, especially women, from actively engaging with pension planning.
The result is already visible. The behaviour of younger investors is shifting, with many starting their investor journey earlier, turning to simple, low-cost and easily understandable products such as ETFs.
But ETFs alone, with their affordability, transparency and ease-of-access, will not suffice. Accessible private market funds are moving from being optional niches catered to sophisticated investors, to becoming a fundamental part of any investment portfolio. They increasingly represent baseline expectations among those building their financial security with an eye to managing their own retirement journey.
Asset managers should respond to this shift by reshaping retail strategies, forming partnerships with digital investment platforms and simplifying access to alternatives. But execution matters. Trust hinges on product clarity, transparent fees, well-defined liquidity profiles, and credible ESG credentials. The asset managers that will resonate most are not the ones pushing polished sales pitches, but those that are building products aligned to long-term investor outcomes.
Capturing the demographic advantage
The path forward for European asset managers starts with product innovation that matches both the investment horizons and the liquidity needs of these evolving investor bases. Hybrid funds, social infrastructure vehicles, and thematic ETFs linked to healthcare, mobility, and assisted living can create direct, scalable pathways into the capital needs of ageing societies.
For younger investors, such products serve as accessible, meaningful ways to build long-term wealth while contributing to systemic resilience. Europe’s ELTIF 2.0 reform has already opened the door, providing the regulatory infrastructure to support long-term private markets-focused funds that speak to younger investors actively planning their own financial future.
But product design alone won’t close the gap. The real shift lies in how asset managers reach tomorrow’s investors. Traditional networks won’t suffice, which is why developing user-friendly digital platforms – many of which already channel retail capital into private markets – offers a faster route to connect, convert and scale.
The demographic window is open. And it won’t stay that way forever. Asset managers who wait for perfect regulatory clarity or who hesitate to move beyond traditional channels will miss it. Those who recognise how financial responsibility is shifting, from public safety nets to individual capital responsibility, are poised to reap the dividends on offer by the silver economy.
The author is Mike Delano, Asset & Wealth Management Leader at PwC Luxembourg










