What the boomers are leaving their children

Fewer jobs. Lower pay. Higher taxes.
Now the Screwed Generation is starting to push back.

by Jonathon Gatehouse on Wednesday, December 1, 2010 10:00am - 184 Comments
What the boomers are leaving their children

Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images; Andy Clark/Reuters

This January, the first baby boomers turn 65. The huge post-Second World War generation—which numbers 76 million in the United States, makes up almost a third of Canada’s population, and according to one estimate, controls 80 per cent of Britain’s wealth—will continue to enter their dotage at the rate of tens of thousands per day for the next 20 years. By 2050, there will be 30 million Americans aged 75 to 85, three in 10 Europeans will be 65-plus, and more than 40 per cent of Japan’s population will be elderly. In Canada, the ratio of workers to retirees—currently five to one—will have been halved by 2036. And despite the odd dissenter, the generation that still oddly finds Paul McCartney relevant has made clear its intention to take everything it feels it has coming. It will be up to all who trail in their wake to pay for their privilege.

Common sense, not to mention decency, wouldn’t call that just. But an outsized, over-entitled, and self-obsessed demographic is awfully hard for politicians to ignore. Take Britain’s example. In last spring’s general election, the most effective ad run by David Cameron’s Conservatives was also one of the simplest: a close-up of a newborn baby, wriggling in a bassinet as a music box tinkled in the background. “Born four weeks ago, eight pounds, three ounces. With his dad’s nose, mum’s eyes, and Gordon Brown’s debt,” intoned a female voice. “Thanks to Labour’s debt crisis, every child in Britain is born owing £17,000. They deserve better.” The point was impossible to miss: the time had come to stop mortgaging the country’s future.

As his first act, the new prime minister, a 44-year-old Gen Xer, cut his and his ministers’ pay by five per cent, and froze all their salaries for five years. Tackling the U.K.’s $177.5-billion budget deficit and $1.6-trillion-plus national debt—annual interest payments alone stand at $70 billion—would require everyone to sacrifice, he told Britons. But there were also expectations that the burden wouldn’t be equally shared. After all, one of Cameron’s leading wonks, David “Two Brains” Willetts, now the minister for universities and science, had published a rather pointed manifesto, The Pinch: How the Baby Boomers Took Their Children’s Future—and How They Can Give It Back, just before the election. After their victory, Thomas Friedman, the New York Times columnist, applauded the coming reckoning for a generation—his own—that had “eaten through all that abundance like hungry locusts.” And even as the new government’s chancellor of the exchequer, George Osborne, stood before Parliament in mid-October to announce $131 billion in spending cuts over the next four years—and the elimination of as many as 500,000 public sector jobs—the protect-the-youth rhetoric continued. “Today’s the day when Britain steps back from the brink,” he said, ensuring “that we do not saddle our children with the interest on the interest on the interest of the debts we were not ourselves prepared to pay.”

The reality, however, proved to be somewhat different. The age when U.K. citizens can start drawing old-age pension would gradually increase from 65 to 66, but other entitlements like free eye tests and prescriptions for the elderly would remain untouched, as well as winter fuel allowances, and free local transit for anyone over 60. Among the biggest budget losers was the department for education, facing an overall reduction of 10.8 per cent, which according to one economic think tank will translate to funding cuts for 60 per cent of primary schools, and 87 per cent of secondary schools. And the legacy of “Two Brains” for Britain’s shafted youth? A 40 per cent cut to post-secondary teaching grants, and a doubling—or in some cases, tripling—of tuition, to as much as $14,500 a year.

On Nov. 10, more than 50,000 angry students gathered in London to rally against the cuts. A video of Nick Clegg, the Liberal-Democrat leader and deputy prime minister, promising to do away with university fees during the election campaign, was greeted with choruses of “wanker, wanker.” “They’re proposing barbaric cuts that would brutalize our colleges and universities,” said Aaron Porter, the president of the National Union of Students. “We’re in the fight of our lives. We face an unprecedented attack on our future before it has even begun.” Later on, a crowd of several thousand descended on the Conservative Party headquarters, trading punches with police, smashing windows, lighting fires, and for a time, occupying the building.

“The situation for young people is not terribly good,” Ed Howker, a 29-year-old London journalist and author, says in a classic bit of British understatement. “And there’s no sense from the government that they have the interests of the next 30 or 40 years of Britons in mind.” Of the country’s 2.45 million unemployed, close to 60 per cent are under the age of 30.The new budget has not only frozen civil service hires, it scrapped two youth jobs funds, slashed rent subsidies, and cut the money for new housing by half. Howker, who along with Shiv Malik wrote the just-released Jilted Generation: How Britain Bankrupted its Youth, says the sense of despair is becoming overwhelming. “Our generation just seems to be a lot worse off. In terms of key things like getting stable housing, or a well-paid job, or a successful career, we just don’t have it.” The boomers’ aren’t evil, he says, but they nonetheless bear much of the responsibility. The generation that relentlessly mythologizes its “peace and love” heyday became ardent consumers as they aged, and ended up moulding politics in their “me-first” image. “It’s a consumer version of democracy, where politicians realized that if they merely satisfied the short-term desires of their electorate, rather than think in the long term and make good decisions on behalf of the future of the country, they would win elections,” Howker argues. The bills become somebody else’s problem.

Want a scary number? How about $1.5 trillion, the amount the C.D. Howe Institute estimates Canada’s rapidly aging boomers are going to cost Ottawa and the provinces in extra health and pension expenses over the next 50 years. Or perhaps 2,500, the number of new long-term care facilities the Canadian Medical Association says will be needed to accommodate the doubling of Canada’s 65-plus population in two decades. Sixty thousand is how many RNs the Canadian Nurses Association predicts we will be short by 2022. Or maybe just one per cent, the expected annual amount of real per-capita GDP growth in Canada over the next 30 years as boomers leave the work force—less than half of what we’ve experienced over the past four decades.

Combine a demographic bulge with a falling birth rate and ever-increasing life expectancy (now 80.7 years at birth in Canada), and pretty much all the figures start looking ugly. “We have a significant challenge ahead of us,” says Chris Ragan, a professor of macroeconomics and economic policy at McGill. “The tax base will slow down, and spending will speed up. We can’t just do nothing.”

Old Age Security, currently costing $33 billion a year, is already the No. 1 item in the federal budget, and Ottawa and the provinces collectively spent $183 billion on health care in 2009. By Ragan’s estimate, health and benefit costs will be inflating federal and provincial budgets by a further $56 billion a year by 2040. (Last spring, a TD Bank report predicted health care expenditures in Ontario will rise from the current 46 per cent to 80 per cent of all program spending by 2030.) The options are stark. We can go the route of the U.K. and cut spending, or we can raise taxes. Stand pat, says the professor, and 30 years from now Canada will be back facing the same fiscal wall as it did in 1995, when the debt-to-GDP ratio peaked at 68.4 per cent.

More frightening still is the fact that the U.K.’s debt already stands at 73.1 per cent of GDP. In the tax-phobic United States, the Congressional Budget Office estimates the debt-to-GDP ratio, currently at 62 per cent, will rise to 87 per cent by 2020. Five years later, it will stand at 109 per cent. And by 2035 it will be 185 per cent. Later this month, a bipartisan commission set up by President Barack Obama will flesh out proposals to cut the US$14-trillion national debt by $3.8 trillion. Everything, including cuts to Social Security, Medicare and tax hikes, is reportedly on the table. “I think we need to listen, we need to gather up all the facts,” Obama told reporters. “If people are, in fact, concerned about spending, debt, deficits and the future of our country, then they’re going to need to be armed with the information about the kinds of choices that are going to be involved.” Some of the trial balloons being floated—like raising the retirement age to 69 by 2075—suggest the real burden will be again borne by the post-boomer generations.

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  • Grumpie Grandpa

    Obviously it is important for Baby Boomers to stay involved in politics. The rabid 30-somethings are liable to try and take it all away from those of us who have earned and innovated for their entire benefit going forward. Interestingly CRA should make it simpler for Canadians to obtain residency abroad. Many Canadians are taking up residency in places such as Belize and Costa Rica. One advantage is loosing the oil/electrical bills for wintertime habitation here. Another is cheaper goods and services. Costa Rica particularly has excellent health care for retired people who have obtained residency – there's a huge ex-pat Canadian community there. Salvation for many will come from moving abroad. Canada cannot afford NOT to tax Boomers more and more… and Boomers are not going to live in cold water flats in Lowertown !!!! Got that??

    • NiceGuy

      We'll catch up to ya….and take back all you've stolen.

    • Scott

      Bunch of gold bricking cowards, take everything they can from Canada and then slither
      away to Florida or somewhere else, pathetic cowards.

  • maureen1955

    As a boomer who was on the tailend of the boom, I'm pretty tired of hearing about how difficult it is for the generations behind the boomers because we are greedy etc. etc. Heads up – most of these articles are written from the perspective of a very small number of boomers – probably the exact same group that were the yuppies of the 1980's – no boomer I knew identified with that group.

    Some realities – as a kid growing up, my school pictures show classes in the 35 kid range because there were just too many of us: didn't get into university first try because there were just too many of us; graduated from university right into a recession and a bad job market because there were just too many of us (however no student debt because student loans were harder to get because there were just too many of us); first house purchased with sky high interest rates (remember 15/16% mortgage rates!!) and after paying huge taxes etc we will be denied service because there are just too many of us – are you seeing a theme here???

    The only fault that the boomers committed against the next couple of generations is that they provided too much comfort for them – they demanded schools with only 20 kids in a class and teacher aides everywhere; they are letting their kids stay home WAY too long (there was no choice when I was growing up because with 6 other siblings there was NO ROOM). They think its fine for their children to change university/college majors at the drop of a hat (my parents made it clear to me they could support me for 4 years of university and that was IT!).

    Enough of this whining – boomers have paid and paid and paid for the services that 'youth' enjoy today – youth need to cowboy up and quit whining

  • Mike Harrison

    Apart from being one of the most petulant pieces of writing I've ever read, let me point out just one of the many, many irrelevancies in the article: "By 2050, there will be 30 million Americans aged 75 to 85." Really? Gee whiz! Your point? A person who is 75-85 in 2050 would have been born in 1965-1975. This piece is about baby boomers, so why the reference to a GenX demographic? Gatehouse obfuscates with irrelevant numbers.

    That GenXers, GenYers and Millennials, archetypes of self-absorption, would have the effrontery to say the *we* think it's about *us* is hypocrisy beneath contempt.

    One inescapable point is pretty much always left out of this type of whinefest about us evil baby boomers: you know what? WE ARE GOING TO DIE. We will die, more and more of us every year — so whence the hoopla, kiddies? Mid-boomers, those born around 1955-56, will be in their mid-80s by 2040. The ones that survive, that is. And in their mid-90s by 2050. But only those that survive. Just what percentage of this huge population bulge do you expect to survive into our mid-80s? 90s? beyond? (I'll research the answers myself in 2050, when I'll be 102.) 8-b

  • Peter van Deursen

    Come on n ow…I began my full time work life at age 17 with a grade 12 education. I was one of six childern in a working class household. I received no subsidies and no inheritance to speak of. I paid for my commercial pilots licence by working a split shift and cycled to work and flying lessons. My two children had one half of their post secondary education paid for by their parents and stand to inherit a property of substantial value. I love them dearly and do not worry overly much about their future. They, like we, have the blessings of being born into a loving family in one of the most priviledged countries in the world, during the most affluent period that history has ever seen. Let's now fret over which generation had it best. We are all among the luckiest people on earth.

    • kathryn c

      Peter
      If you left school at age 17 and with your grade 12 now, you'd be homeless and you'd stay that way. You may not have received direct subsidies but if you are a boomer, then you benefited from them all the same. For instance, the tuition you and your kids shared was a fraction of what kids have been paying the last few years. And they had jobs to go to when they graduated.

      "We are all among the luckiest people on earth."
      Too right you were.

  • NiceGuy

    That the Baby Boomers will go down as the group largely responsible for the downfall of western civilzation is not in doubt. They promised to 'change the world'…and they certainly did that. We will never recover from them.

  • Wendel

    Lol. Yes health care and other social services will get destroyed by the influx of older users. I can say as a fact, that I will not fund this by paying higher taxes. I will take my higher education and move to another country that let's me keep my pay cheque. This is ridiculus. All the young talent will leave to a new country that doesn't rob them blind. I will lead the charge to the exits. Good luck capitalism.

    • Greg

      Nice wendel, we handed you everything & when you have to pay the piper I hear. "I don't care about you anymore, I'm running away from home". Well Good riddance & good luck finding a better country. I hear China is doing well, don't let the door hit you on the way out.

  • Xxx

    I will leave. Enjoy the kraft dinner and wieners you will be dining on you fool

  • Healthcare Insider

    Well the one thing I do know about our so called boomer generation is that we have a strong work ethic and a belief in doing what must be done to survive. So don't you fear Vince, Wendell & Xxx, even if we have to dine on kraft dinner and wieners every night and work until the day we drop dead (because you three have left this wonderful country for "greener pastures") to pay the bills and keep the economy afloat, we'll do just that!

  • Kevin Fleming

    What a disgusting lie. Just another in a long line of smears from the right.

    The key characteristic of those responsible for the mess is class (ruling), not generation.

  • Bobby

    Blame the hippies…again? Isn't it possible that neoliberalism and the deregulation of financial markets has finally been exposed as a fraud.

    We have known about the demographic problem for a long time and as hard as this may be for some to accept…we might actually have to invest MORE money in social services and less in the military. We will soon find out what real "security" means.

    • NiceGuy

      "neoliberalism and the deregulation of financial markets…"

      Sounds like, oh I don't know, Tony Blair and Bill Clinton….the iconic baby boomer losers….

      • Bobby

        Yeah… and Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, Brian Mulroney, George Bush Sr., John Major, Jean Chretien, Gordon Brown, Paul Martin, Stephen Harper, George Bush Jr., Michael Ignatieff, Sarah Palin and anyone else who receives majority support from either of the two centrist parties.

  • Spam Agent 735698

    "45 year old gen-Xer"?

    Uhhhhh… off by a decade or so there bub. No one from Gen X is in their 40s yet.

    • Guest

      Douglas Coupland is.

    • Critical Thinker

      wrongo Spammer….the GenX generation is broadly defined as those born between 1964 and 1982. Nothing is of course cut and dry as there is a grey area at the edges. EG. Some boomers had kids (gen Y) prior to 1982.

      Broadly Boomers are 1946 to 1964, Gen Y is 1982 to 2000 and the millenials (kids of the Xers) are 2000 to 2018.

  • Briansz

    Part 1: Baby Boomer corporatists and their apologist cronies are responsible for this situation. These self entitled corporate abusers have created this economic illusion of monetary scarcity to be assumed by the middle class and the next generation, while paying themselves fat salaries, benefits, bonuses, retirement and severance packages while asking middle class workers and their children to foot the bill and to buckle up their belts on all of the above. These corporatists and their apologist cronies have part timed all the jobs for next generation, exported our well paid jobs to the third world countries while raking in the insane profits and then they have the gall to raise prices and taxes, the cost of living, health care and education costs while they find loop holes to pay less or no taxes and then hide their assets in Swiss or Caiman Island tax havens.

  • Briansz

    Part 2: These same people then preach austerity to the middle class and the next generation, while they live like self entitled kings in opulence. The Baby Boomer generation turned their kids into self gratifying consumer addicts to generate insane profits and then use their children's addiction for gadgets and other pass times against them as an excuse to rationalize and raise their tuition fees by shoving corporate constructed consumer habits in their children's faces. These greedy Baby Boomer corporatists and their jealous apologists have shown their true faces and how they dehumanize their children and themselves in the process and then rationalizing their behaviour as business needs. This greedy Baby Boomer generation should be ashamed of themselves.

  • P Schroeder

    Stop blaming the Boomers. Every generation has faced challenges in their work and financial life. As a BOOMER I was lucky to have had a 19 +3/4% Mortgage to go with the 22% car Loan. This in an atmosphere of more than double digit unemployment. If anything a couple of severe recessions taught the Boomers to be conservative in their spending. Buy a small house and only move up when you can afford it. We have been married for 30 years and always only had one car. We never went on a vacation we could not pay cash for and never ran credit card debt. I have 35 years of working and never collected unemployment insurance. There was no extended Unemployment insurance for Maternity leave and my Wife stayed home with the pre-school aged children. Again we never collected any child care benefits and paid our own way. So BUCK UP kids, get an education you can actually do something with and get out of your parent's basement.

    • brittney28

      Hm yeah buy a small house in metro Vancouver for what $800,000 on a minimum wage job after graduating
      from university with huge debts. Boomer, yeah, umm hum.

      • judy

        did someone tell you that you have to live in metro van?? the country doesn't end at the BC eastern border

  • Jebise

    There is a solution. NO CHILDREN!
    No children until you finish school, get a reliable job and a place to live. Then think about children. But if the state wants us to have children, they'll have to fork over a reliable future for them!

  • Addie

    Glad to find this article online. I'm generation screwed and I can't afford a magazine subscription.

    • judy

      tha's ok, hon. we baby boomers can't afford one either

  • concerned canadian

    Unfortunately, this article misses the point. The issue is not the "entitlements", taxation rates etc. that the baby-boomers have left their children, but rather a crap economy. Years of deregulation, privatization, and supply-side interventions have left an economy that is in utter chaos: consumers are overburdened with debt; workers are underpaid and overworked; and inequality is at or approaching pre-depression levels.

    In reality, it's difficult to place the blame on a single generation. What we really should be discussing is what led us down this path. We should be questioning the merits of an ideology that promotes the beneficence of a free market. Maybe it's just me, but opening the hatches to investment was no panacea to the economic troubles of the 90s. Instead, it has left us with a world of trouble and real anxieties as to where we go from here.

  • Young Canadian

    As a young Canadian reading the above comments left me terribly disheartened. I am a typical Gen Y. I have had the luxury of 8 years of University education, I've travelled the world and yes I do currently live with my parents. ( I am unemployed like many other graduates in this country). Am I in debt? Oh yah. Do the next 5 years look promising for employment? Not particularly. Do I think pitting generations of our citizens against each other is a necessary or worthwhile endeavor? ABSOLUTELY NOT.

  • Young Canadian

    Come on Gen Y, show some leadership. Now is the time to look at the unique demographic issues and come up with some INNOVATIVE solutions. We are going to inherit this country and this talk of leaving the country for "greener pastures" is absurd. Think of the generations past, the sacrafices they have made, some giving their lives so that you could have the luxury to decide where you wanted to live and what you wanted to study. The task is great. Our economy is in chaos, we have unprecedented challenges in health and social care and we are currently lacking political leadership. So to that end, yes our country and our future generations deserve better. Time to man up and stop comparing the challenges of generations. They are all unique and all require unique solutions. Time to reinvent what it means to be Gen Y.

  • Jenny

    I get tired of all the complaints about how the Boomers are responsible for the debt and lack of opportunity. As Gerard Caplan says in his article at Rabble.ca, "There are more filthy rich folks now than at any other moment in history and they're leveraging their astounding wealth to make sure they get filthier(richer) at the expense of the rest of us." That means at the expense of all workers but especially the most vulnerable ones, which includes young people. The lean and mean policies of the corporate world, and undertaxing the millonaires are the causes of the bleak outlook for today's young adults. His article is worth reading. Blaming boomers helps to take the heat off the real culprits but it won't fix the problem.

  • Sam

    Some facts to be considered before blaming babyboomers.
    Post tax income growth between 1979 and 2006 for the poorest Americans increased by 11%
    for the middle class, income increased by 21% ( largely as a result of 2 income families)
    FOR THE WEALTHIEST 1%, post tax income INCREASED BY 256%!
    Go to http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175326/tomgram%3A… for the whole article.
    There is only so much to go around and SOMEBODY is taking more than their fair share! That's why the future looks grim.

  • Greg

    I couldn't have said it better.

  • ColdStanding

    The Venetian "diplomatic" model of international relations suggests that the best way to manage rivals that could treaten the wealth and power that you have looted, sorry, earned is to orchestrate a conflict between those rivals.

    If you are so inclinded, indulge my thought experiment: Who are the Venetians within Canadian soceity? How would they (continue to) benefit if our soceity was encourage to fracture along generational lines?

  • http://Answer'sintheMirror Wilf

    So who’s to blame:

    The Great-Depression-WWII generation who vowed their children would never have to go through what they did, or

    The politicians who rose to that call, or

    The children who were conditioned to expect nothing but the best?

  • Paul Weitzel

    Generation Screwed aka The Boomer Blame Game
    As a 65 year old, I have been increasingly bemused by the ongoing fingerpointing in the media regarding the incredible challenge the current 44-64 year olds will create for the rest of the world’s humanity over the next 20 years: starting (GASP) in only a few short weeks.
    A few observations follow in response to casually gleaned data from current journalism.
    On the one hand, there appears to be great concern about the elder population staying in the work force as this behavior reportedly takes jobs away from younger workers. Yet governments worldwide are considering raising the age of retirement to encourage elders to keep working. As well, on this note, those who retire early are pinpointed as increasing the costs of healthcare, et al on the smaller numbers of the younger working population. These Canadians are, it would seem, benefitting from the increasing number of available jobs as this large group of elders goes into retirement. It appears that boomers are dammed if they do and dammed if they don’t—-Hmmm—can’t have it both ways !!!
    On a world level, it would appear that the non boomers are doing a fine job of creating their own economic woes, what with the spending well beyond one’s means as reported in Britian recently (“Live for the moment” was the rational) Street riots of thousands protesting cutbacks on the incredibly bloated social programs found in many countries in Western Europe have been staged and participated in by many non boomers, as simple perusal of photographs of events easy illustrate. Apparently, wanting one’s cake and eating it is not just the perview of any specific generation, even if the cake is not to be served for decades and needs to be paid for continuously and well in advance by those protesting.—once again, can’t have it both ways
    Despite current media rhetoric, opportunity to succeed is well within most peoples’ grasp in Canada, due to a variety of reasons, and regardless of whomever one may otherwise like to point fingers at to blame. Pointing a finger at someone else means there are three pointing back at oneself; but I digress. Young people can’t complain about unbalanced competition from ethnic groups who are willing to practise a more focused work ethic than they. What will they do in the next few decades as Canada once again, as in the middle of last century, becomes a nation of immigrant families? What do these people from around the world who desire coming to Canada know about opportunity that entitled “Canadians” seem to be ignorant of? These new Canadians of the next two to three decades, who will represent a large percentage of the country, will bring with them the desire to make a better quality of life for themselves and their adopted country. All those currently not willing to face up to the challenge will find themselves falling behind; and rightfully so.
    It is worth pointing out that the pension benefits people receive upon retirement have been contributed to throughout their working life as involuntary deductions by their employer and government. Therefore they have in fact contributed, in the case of teachers for example, hundreds of thousands of dollars throughout their career that remains locked in to whatever plans they were involved with for the balance of their lives.This decades- long contribution process should manage to offset the proported cost of the existance of an increased number of elders without imposition on society in general, unless short sighted governments of the time neglected to invest these deductions to cover future costs. In addition to this, the sheer number of volunteers that will be available over these next two decades will indeed mushroom, as elders generally make up a high percentage of this group in any society; thus further contributing to cost reductions at all levels in society across the board.
    I could continue, but will resist that temptation with a simple closure for consideration by any analysts tempted to build an arguement/make a point at the expense of another individual or group.
    As with all things, this current so-called critical time too will pass as the boomers walk off the planet in the next 20 plus years and the resources they currently are connected to through personal ownership or social programming will be redistributed to society in general.
    “BAZINGA” -tm–Jim Parsons AKA Dr.Sheldon Cooper

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