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.