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Canberra Today 3°/8° | Wednesday, May 1, 2024 | Digital Edition | Crossword & Sudoku

Who’d be a baby boomer when it’s all bad news?

Kids from the ’50s… Casual ageism is the last remaining form of vilification seen as socially acceptable, with older Australians fair game on the generational frontier.

CLIVE HAMILTON and MYRA HAMILTON critique the relentless tide of baby boomer bashing that implies it’s become a crime to be born in the 15 years after World War II.

JUDGING by the relentless tide of baby boomer bashing, it’s become a crime to be born in the 15 years after World War II. 

A recent story in the “Sydney Morning Herald” berated boomers for “hanging on to bigger family homes… while others struggle with overcrowding”.

If they were half-decent human beings, they would get out of the homes they’d lived in for decades and free them up for families, rich ones presumably, since all boomers own multi-million dollar homes.

We now have a cohort of younger commentators furiously mining the data and cherry-picking the numbers to find new reasons to excoriate baby boomers.

We’ve even seen the media blame boomers for depriving Sydney CBD of energy, creativity and dynamism because young people can’t afford to rent apartments from the nasty “older property-owning classes” who lack all these things. And now big-spending boomers are copping the blame for inflation, interest rate rises, and the cost-of-living crisis.

For the record, the Reserve Bank attributes inflation mainly to international factors. And the only group increasing its real spending are the over 70s, by about two per cent. The story turned figures from a report into a generational conflict rather than the real story about how inflation is harming poorer Australians more.

In the noughties, boomers were castigated for fuelling a fiscal crisis, because it was predicted that, as they aged, they would be a drain on the public purse (pensions, hospitals etcetera) and become a “burden” on younger workers. They were blamed for not saving enough for their retirement, even though superannuation came in when they were halfway through their working lives.

More recently, they were responsible for the housing crisis, and now they are reproached for causing the interest rate crisis. Once they were too poor, now they are too rich.

And they’re so selfish, sitting on their piles of wealth while wielding their political power to “lock out” younger people from housing, secure employment, cheap education and even, with their lock-out laws, entertainment.

We need a reality check

To begin, fewer than 10 per cent of boomers benefited from the fabled free university education. For the most part, only the children of the privileged middle-class attended university in the late 1970s and 1980s. That was the reason for HECS, so that low-income people would no longer subsidise middle-class kids to get the high-paying jobs.

Then there is the toxic myth of “SKIing”, spending the kid’s inheritance. In fact, many boomers, anxious about their children’s future, are responsible for a very large transfer of wealth through the bank of mum and dad. 

In fact, over the next couple of decades boomers will bequeath a massive $3.5 trillion in assets to their children, the same ones they have been oppressing so thoughtlessly.

Let’s not forget the huge subsidy provided by grandparents’ childcare. More children receive care from a grandparent in a typical week than from any other form of childcare. Many grandparents retire early, work fewer hours or change their jobs to allow their daughters and sons to avoid childcare costs, work longer hours and save more.

Yes, the housing market is shockingly unjust, but blaming a generation for it instead of bad policies is unfair, lazy and often spiteful. And it’s simply incorrect.

Those landlords putting up rents for young people? Most of them are Gen Xers and millennials. And the fastest growing category of homelessness is not among 20-somethings but among women over 55, baby boomers.

Casual ageism is the last remaining form of vilification seen as socially acceptable, with older Australians fair game on the generational frontier – liberally denigrated in the media as rich, selfish, greedy, smug, and culturally bereft.

This characterisation must be mystifying if not deeply hurtful to the 60-year-old woman living in her car, unemployed due to entrenched ageism in the workplace, and with no savings because much of her 30s and 40s were spent caring for children.

There are rich boomers and there are poor boomers and many in between. For the generational warmongers, the rich-poor divide has been displaced on to a manufactured generational divide.

This fake conflict is responsible for enormous bitterness out there. One newspaper contributor admitted that she can’t wait for her mother to die so she can inherit the house.

As if we didn’t have enough social division in Australia already. This generational scapegoating places blame on a malevolent generation rather than the political and economic system that creates and perpetuates inequalities between rich and poor.

Most top decision makers today in politics, business, and the media are Gen Xers and millennials.

Perhaps millennials and Gen Xers might turn to their brothers and sisters who now run the country and ask them to create a fairer society. Who knows, they might find plenty of baby boomers on their side.

Prof Clive Hamilton, Vice-Chancellor’s Chair of Public Ethics at Charles Sturt University in Canberra, and Associate Professor Myra Hamilton at the ARC Centre of Excellence in Population Ageing Research, University of Sydney

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Ian Meikle, editor

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4 Responses to Who’d be a baby boomer when it’s all bad news?

cbrapsycho says: 25 January 2024 at 8:24 am

What a superb article! Thankyou to the Hamiltons for speaking out on an issue that hugely upsets many people, as they feel attacked and blamed for things they didn’t do.

We need more support for older people, not less and certainly not more bullying and harassment by the young, strong, fit and healthy who’ve not fully taken responsibility for their own lives and situations yet. Those who hope that a parent or grandparent will die and take care of them through their death are callous, cruel and completely lacking in compassion. Not very nice people one might say. Nasty even.

Sadly I hear of some younger people in the workplace hassling older people there, telling them that they should get out of the way so the younger ones can take charge. If they so disregard the well-being of others, what sort of managers would they be?

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Jane says: 26 January 2024 at 2:09 pm

Great article; couldn’t have out it better myself. The only problem I see with it is that the younger people who should read it, probably won’t.

Reply
davidmaywald says: 31 January 2024 at 12:02 pm

Men have been far more castigated than baby boomers, particularly white straight men. Policy continues to be shaped in favour of the interests of seniors. There is a strong political voice and advocacy on behalf of old people, but this is almost absent for men and boys.

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