As the boomers have held on to generous jobs and benefits, their children have given up on raising families
by Joel Kotkin
In Madrid you see
them on the streets, jobless, aimless, often bearing college degrees but
working as cabbies, baristas, street performers, or—more often—not at all. In
Spain as in Greece, nearly half of the adults under 25 don’t work.
Call them the screwed generation, the victims of
expansive welfare states and the massive structural debt charged by their
parents. In virtually every developed country, and increasingly in developing
ones, they include not only the usual victims, the undereducated and recent
immigrants, but also the college-educated.
Nowhere is this clearer than in the European Union’s Club Med of Spain, Greece, Portugal, and Italy, the focal point of the emerging new economic crisis. There’s a growing sense of hopelessness in these places, where debt is turning politics into an ugly choice between austerity, which reduces present opportunities, or renewed emphasis on public spending, which all but guarantees major problems in the bond market, and spending promises that can’t be kept.
“We don’t know
what to do now,” Jaime, a Madrid waiter in his late 20s told me last week. “My
wife lost her auditor’s job, and I can’t support the whole family. Maybe we
have to move somewhere like Dubai or maybe Miami.”
Many young Greeks, Italians, Portuguese, and Spaniards already have made their moves, with a half million leaving Spain alone last year. But it’s not just Club Med youths who are contemplating greener pastures. Ireland, which in recent decades actually attracted new migrants, is exporting a thousand people a week. In recession-wracked Britain, nearly half of the populationsay they would like to move elsewhere.
Pablo Vega
Gonzalez, an unemployed videogame tester living at home with his parents, reads
a book in his bedroom in Madrid. (Angel Navarrete, Bloomberg / Getty Images )
Driving this
exodus is a growing perception that this collapse is not cyclical but secular.
Increasingly, young
Europeans are deciding not to start families—the key to future growth—in reaction to the
recession. The stories about divorced Spanish or Italian young fathers sleeping
on the streets or in their carsare not exactly a strong advertising for parenthood.
Even in
once-rigidly Catholic Spain, marriage and fertility rates have been falling for
decades, and family structure weakening. Spaniards are having fewer children
now than they did during the brutal civil war of the late 1930s. Alejandro
Macarrón Larumbe, a Madrid-based management consultant, in his 2011 book, El
Suicidio Demográfico de España, points out that the actual number of Spanish newborns has declined to an
18th-century level.
Only those
connected with the government, or able to ride asset inflation, will do well in
the new “progressive” order.
This demographic
implosion makes sense given the legacy left behind by the boomers, who have
held on to generous jobs and benefits but left little opportunity for their
children, not to mention a high tax burden on what opportunities they do find.
For a generation academics have sold higher education—the more the better—as
the cure for unemployment and the great guarantor of success. Yet rising
education rates in places like Spain have not created jobs for the rising
generation, but only expanded unemployment and falling wages among the ranks of
the educated.
Even America,
traditionally a beneficiary of European woes, seems to have turned on its
young. College debt is crushing many young people with degrees—particularly
those outside
the sciences and engineering—that are not easily marketable. The spiking number of people
in their 30s working as unpaid internsreflects this erosion of opportunity. This has
happened even as the price tag for college has shot up; 94 percent of students
who earn a bachelor’s degree now owe money for their educations, compared to 45
percent two decades ago. Here’s a
tribute to futility: today a majority
of unemployed Americans age 25 and older attended college,
something never before seen.
Governmental
priorities here continue to favor boomers and seniors over the young. For a
generation, transfer payments have favored the elderly, a trend likely to
accelerate as the boomers continue retiring and demand their due. According
to Brookings, America spends
2.4 times as much on the elderly as on children.
Forced to take
lower wages if they can find work at all and facing still-expensive housing in
those markets where many of the jobs are, roughly one in five American adults
25 to 34 now live with their parents—almost double the percentage from 30 years
ago. Increasingly both Wall Street and green “progressives” urge young people
to abandon homeownership for a poorer, more crowded life in expensive,
high-density apartment blocks.
Across the
developed world, wages are being cut for young Americans, Europeans, and
Japanese as politicians prefer to offer less to the young than to take anything
away from those already ensconced in employment, particularly if organized into
unions. In the U.S., everything from government
jobsto employment
in auto factoriesand even
supermarkets is now on a two-tier track, with older workers’ guaranteed
pensions and higher salaries not shared by newer hires.
Pensions represent
a bigger generational issue than salaries do. The European welfare state makes
America’s seem Scrooge-ish. Their lifetime guarantees are so extensive, and
unsustainable, that even the über-frugal Germans are calling for a
special tax on younger workersto fund their parents’ pensions.
This generational
transfer will likely be accelerated by an aging electorate. In Spain, notes
Larumbe, voters over 60 now make up more than 30 percent of the electorate, up
from 22 percent in 1977; in 2050 they will constitute close to a majority. The
same patterns can be seen in other European countries and, although less
dramatically, in the U.S. as well.
As a result,
boomer- and senior-dominated parties, both right and left, generally end up
screwing young people. This occurs even as they proclaim their fulsome concern
for “future generations.”
Politicians on the
right, in Europe and elsewhere, scapegoat immigrants in part to hold on to
their share of older votes. Left-wing analysts rightly
point outthat the boomer-
and senior-dominated Tea Party here is not likely to cut their own
entitlements, preferring instead to push cutbacks in education and other
disbursements that aid the young while fighting spending on job creation and
productive forms of infrastructure investment.
Politicians on the
left, meanwhile, tend to favor redistribution and “sustainability” over the new
wealth creation critical for youthful advancement. Many boomers seem
to suspect economic growth itself, as when John Holdren, now President Obama’s senior
science adviser, back in the 1970s called for the “de-development” of
high-income countries. A cynic might conclude that since the progressive
boomers already got theirs, it’s fine for the young to live in an era of
limits.
With the kind of
tax and regulatory regime advocated by today’s regressive progressives—already
largely adopted in my home state of California—greens and their allies many not
have to worry about too much new growth. Only those connected with the government,
or able to ride asset inflation, will do well in the new “progressive” order.
In Europe, east
Asia, and America alike, the left and the right have both proven unprepared or
unwilling to address the fundamental growth crisis facing the next generation.
Neither austerity nor a “progressive” focus on greater government spending and
“sustainability” can create the jobs and new opportunities so sorely lacking on
the streets of Athens and Madrid and increasingly in American cities as well.
The developed
world’s youth shouldn’t expect much help from an older generation that has
preserved its generous arrangements at the cost of increasingly stark prospects
for its own progeny. Instead the emerging generation needs to push its own new
agenda for economic growth and expanded opportunity.
Excellent and pragmatic.
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