What the boomers are leaving their children - World

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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http://www2.macleans.ca/2010/12/01/what-the-boomers-are-leaving/
Via InstaFetch

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