As Taiwan officially crosses the UN threshold with over 20% of its population aged 65 or over, reports show Switzerland is following closely behind. This demographic shift heralds significant future challenges for the nation's social security, healthcare, and economic systems.

"Taiwan has crossed a demographic threshold. For the first time, more than 20% of its population is aged 65 or over."
"The designation reflects both rapid ageing and a shrinking populationâone of the islandâs most pressing long-term challenges."
Switzerland stands on the brink of a historic demographic shift that will redefine the nation's social fabric. While Taiwan has just officially crossed the United Nations' critical threshold to become a "super-aged" society, the Alpine nation is following mere steps behind. This is not a distant future problem; it is an immediate reality. With Taiwan's senior population surging past the 20% mark this week, the global spotlight now turns to economies with similar trajectories. Switzerland is front and center.
The clock is ticking loudly. Current data reveals that Switzerland is dangerously close to the same tipping point, with the demographic gap closing faster than anticipated. This shift heralds more than just a change in census numbers; it signals a fundamental transformation in how our society functions, works, and cares for its own. As Asian economies grapple with the shock of rapid ageing, Switzerland must now confront its own reflection in the mirror. The era of a perpetually youthful workforce is ending, and the transition to a silver society is no longer a predictionâit is happening right now.
The United Nations draws a hard line in the sand: a society is "super-aged" when those aged 65 and over exceed 20% of the population. Taiwan has just shattered this ceiling with a figure of 20.06%. Switzerland is breathing down its neck. According to 2024 data from the Swiss Federal Statistical Office, a staggering 19.6% of the Swiss population is already over 65. We are mere decimal points away from joining this exclusive, challenging club.
Forecasts are unequivocal: Switzerland is on track to officially hit "super-aged" status by 2026. This is a dramatic escalation from the UN's definition of an "ageing" society, which requires only a 7% senior population. Switzerland has long passed that milestone and is now sprinting toward the 20% mark. This rapid acceleration places immense pressure on policymakers who can no longer rely on gradual adjustments. The buffer zone has vanished. The statistics paint a picture of a nation where the ratio of retirees to workers is tightening at an unprecedented rate, demanding immediate attention from Bern.
If 2026 is the tipping point, 2040 is the landslide. Projections indicate that within two decades, Switzerland will not just be super-aged; it will be "deeply super-aged." By 2040, it is estimated that between 25% and 26% of the entire population will be over the age of 64. Imagine a Switzerland where one in every four people you meet on the street is of retirement age. This demographic restructuring is seismic.
This surge represents a fundamental alteration of the Swiss social contract. A quarter of the population drawing on pensions and requiring increased healthcare services creates a logistical and financial challenge of unprecedented scale. While longevity is a triumph of modern medicine and high living standards, the structural implications are severe. We are moving toward a reality where the "grey vote" dominates politics and the "silver economy" dictates market trends. The infrastructure of 2040 must be built today, yet the urgency in political discourse often lags behind the relentless march of these percentages.
Taiwan's ascent to super-aged status is fueled by a collapsing birth rateâa warning siren for Switzerland. In Taiwan, children aged 14 or under now make up a meager 11.5% of the population. The island saw a record low of 107,812 births in 2025, with a crude birth rate plummeting to 4.56 per 1,000 people. This is a demographic vacuum. The causesâhigh living costs, delayed marriage, and the financial burden of childcareâmirror the exact struggles facing young families in Zurich, Geneva, and Basel today.
Switzerland is not immune to this fertility crisis. Like Taiwan, we face a dual squeeze: a rapidly ageing top-heavy population and a shrinking base of youth. The decision to postpone or abandon parenthood is increasingly driven by economic necessity rather than lifestyle choice. While Taiwan is scrambling with measures like expanding access to medically assisted reproduction, Switzerland must ask if its own family policies are sufficient to halt the slide. Without a stabilization in birth rates, the dependency ratio will worsen, leaving a shrinking workforce to shoulder a growing burden.
The transition to a super-aged society is not merely a statistical curiosity; it is an economic reckoning. As Switzerland crosses the 20% threshold, the strain on the AHV/AVS (Old Age and Survivors' Insurance) and the healthcare system will intensify dramatically. A shrinking workforce cannot indefinitely support a soaring retiree population without significant structural reforms. The math simply does not add up under the current models.
We are facing a future where labor shortages could become chronic, stifling innovation and growth. The "Swiss model" of prosperity has always relied on a robust, active labor force. As we follow Taiwan into this new demographic epoch, the question is no longer if we need to adapt, but how fast we can do it. From raising the retirement age to rethinking immigration and automation, every option must be on the table. Switzerland is about to enter uncharted territory, and navigating it will require the same boldness and pragmatism that built this nation. The super-aged era is here; we must be ready.