There are real conflicts between the young and old; so far, the young are losing
By Robert J. Samuelson
I worry about the
future — not mine but that of my three children, all in their 20s. It is an
axiom of American folklore that every generation should live better than its
predecessors. But this is not a constitutional right or even an entitlement,
and I am skeptical that today’s young will do so. Nor am I alone. A recent USA
Today/Gallup poll finds that nearly 60 percent of Americans
are also doubters. I meet many parents who fear the future that awaits their
children.
The young (and I
draw the line at 40 and under) face two threats to their living standards. The
first is the adverse effect of the Great Recession on jobs and wages. Even if
this fades with time, there’s the second threat: the costs of an aging America.
It’s not just Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid — huge transfers from the
young to the old — but also deferred maintenance on roads, bridges, water
systems and power grids. Newsweek calls the young “generation screwed”; I prefer the
milder “generation squeezed.”
Already, batteries
of indicators depict the Great Recession’s damage. In a Pew survey last year, a
quarter of 18-to-34-year-olds said they’d moved back with
parents to save money. Getting a job has been time-consuming and often
futile. In July, the unemployment rate among
18-to-29-year-olds was 12.7 percent. Counting people who dropped out of the
labor market raises that to 16.7 percent, says Generation Opportunity, an
advocacy group for the young. Among recent high-school graduates, unemployment
rates are near half for African Americans, a third for Hispanics and a quarter
for whites, notes the Economic Policy
Institute, a liberal think tank.
Of course,
generalizations can be overdone. Countless millions of young people are doing —
and will do — fine. History can’t be predicted. The mass retirement of baby-boom
workers may create job scarcities and raise wages. Still, some setbacks will
endure. Some skills that would have been learned on the job won’t ever be. Life
decisions are deferred. Among 18-to-29-year olds, the weak economy is causing
18 percent to postpone marriage and 23 percent to delay starting a family,
reports a survey by
Generation Opportunity.
And then there are
the costs of aging. Gains in productivity — from new technologies or better
skills — that would normally flow into paychecks will be siphoned off to pay
for retiree benefits, underfunded state and local government pensions and
infrastructure repair. Taxes will rise; if not, public services will fall. Or
both. Population change can’t be repealed. The ratio of workers to retirees, 5-to-1 in 1960
and 3-to-1 in 2010, is projected at nearly 2-to-1 by 2025.
It’s often said
that today’s young will ultimately benefit from this lopsided tax-and-transfer
system. Old themselves, they will be similarly subsidized by their young.
Doubtful. Sooner or later, the system’s oppressive costs will become so obvious
that future benefits will be curbed. Chances are the young will still pay for
today’s elderly without themselves receiving comparable support.
As a parent, all
this rattles me. We judge our success by how well our children do. We love them
and want them to succeed, even if most of us recognize — at some point — that
our ability to influence and protect them has expired. Peering into the
unfathomable future, we don’t like what we think we see. We’re dispatching them
into a less secure and less prosperous world. These parental anxieties, I
think, are the presidential campaign’s great, unacknowledged issue. Many voters
will decide based on a calculus of which candidate would minimize the economic
perils for their grown children.
But the calculus
will be selective. To aid the young, we could tighten Social Security and
Medicare, raising eligibility ages and reducing payouts for wealthier retirees.
Unlikely. Younger voters seem clueless about advancing their economic
interests. In 2008, 18-to-29-year-olds supported Barack Obama by 34 percentage
points. They love his pseudo-youthfulness. Or his positions on other issues
(immigration, gay rights) trump economics. As president, Obama has done nothing
to improve generational fairness.
If the young won’t
help themselves, their parents and grandparents might. They might champion
revising retirement programs. Dream on. Parents and grandparents may be worried
about their offspring’s prospects, but they’re not so worried as to sacrifice
their own. There are real conflicts between the young and old; so far, the
young are losing.
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