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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (7577)9/20/2003 9:44:31 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 


The looming clash of the generations

Philip Bowring IHT
Friday, August 22, 2003

A demographic 'perfect storm'

LONDON A new intergenerational war is looming
in the West. For once, youth could be on the
losing side. Western countries need new social
policies that address the consequences of
demographic and technological change - but the
baby boom generation that brought about the
social revolution of the 60's and 70's could suffer
under such policies, and has the numbers to
prevent them from being adopted.


Four issues are coming together to create a
"perfect storm": birth rates below replacement
level, longer life spans, holes in private pension
funds and massive government fiscal deficits. The
aging generation has been promised much more
than can delivered without dramatically damaging
the prospects of future generations. This will be a
political battle, a new form of class warfare over
scarce resources. Victory for the old guard would
hasten the decline of the West.

International demographers attending a meeting
in Berlin of the International Statistical Institute
warned last Friday that the world was failing to
face up to the economic, geopolitical and
environmental problems expected to surface
because of a rapidly aging, growing population
this century. "While the 20th century was the
century of population growth, we can already say
from a demographic perspective that the 21st
century will go into the history books as the
century of aging," said Wolfgang Lutz, of the
International Institute for Applied Systems
Analysis in Austria.

Demographic decline is especially apparent in
Europe. In most countries fertility is far below
replacement levels. Even if fertility recovered
quickly to levels that stabilized the population, the
new baby bulge would not bolster the work force
until almost all the post-1945 baby boom
generation was well into retirement.

Neither the state nor the private sector is in a
position to meet the promises made to the aging
generation. Tax and deficit levels are already high
and would have to rise by huge amounts to fund
pension promises. Tough political decisions will
have to be taken to change expectations.

The simplest way of meeting the immediate
demographic challenge would be to raise the
retirement age to reflect actual life spans. That will
happen eventually, but a rapid increase from 65 to
70 is needed now, regardless of previous promises
of retirement at 65 or less on generous pensions -
often of two-thirds of a worker's final salary.

A more modest increment in retirement age,
taking effect in 2010, say, would be too little, too
late. As it is, many fit people in their 60's enjoy
comfortable lives of leisure. Their numbers have
been swelled by generous early retirement
packages given on grounds of "getting rid of the
dead wood" or "reducing unemployment."

A steeper increase in the retirement age and/or a
radical reduction in promised pension levels
would be extremely unpopular among the huge
number of workers currently approaching
retirement. Yet such measures are essential to
avoid crippling taxes on the declining percentage
of people in work - which would be a further
deterrent to having child. Ideally the state should
be reducing tax burdens on young families and
taxing pensions for the able-bodied. Whether the
long-spoiled baby boomers are willing to concede
that such measures are necessary is another
matter. They have the votes to defeat any
government that would introduce them.

The overall situation is even worse than the
upcoming deficit in state pension systems
suggests. In the private sector, the shift from
pension schemes defined by benefits to schemes
defined by contributions has come too late. In the
United States there is an increasing likelihood of
huge shortfalls in private pension plans insured
by the federal Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation. Forthcoming retirees see these
defined benefits as a right. But should later
generations bear the burden of yet more
government debt to fund these shortfalls? An
equivalent situation exists in Britain.

Another private sector problem is the need for
companies to spend large amounts shoring up
pension funds rather than investing in new plant
or projects. That will slow economic growth,
adding to the woes caused by static or declining
work forces. Capital can replace labor in many
circumstances. But if the capital is not available
because resources are going into retiree
consumption, the result must be economic
decline.

An even more difficult issue is how much a society
should spend on keeping octogenarians alive for a
few additional months, or the victims of severe
strokes and Alzheimer's disease alive for years
without hope of meaningful recovery. Already a
very high proportion of health spending goes on
the last two years of a person's life and on care for
the very old.

Even in the United States, the public sector is
funding 60 percent of long-term care. Who will
fund long-term care when the baby boomers are
in their 80's? Society will have to reappraise its
attitude to death. That is at least in part a political
decision. Those approaching retirement are
unlikely to welcome any change that takes them
off life support earlier.

Opinion polls suggest that young people are
increasingly detached from the current political
process. Their commitment to democratic
processes could be further undermined if they
decide that the power of the ballot works against
them.

As it is, politicians in the West are increasingly
chasing the votes of the old. It cannot be long
before those under 40 see the need to organize
politically to fight for their own interests, and
those of future generations.


iht.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (7577)9/20/2003 9:47:55 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
The looming clash of the generations
Philip Bowring IHT
Friday, August 22, 2003

A demographic 'perfect storm'

LONDON A new intergenerational war is looming
in the West. For once, youth could be on the
losing side. Western countries need new social
policies that address the consequences of
demographic and technological change - but the
baby boom generation that brought about the
social revolution of the 60's and 70's could suffer
under such policies, and has the numbers to
prevent them from being adopted.

Four issues are coming together to create a
"perfect storm": birth rates below replacement
level, longer life spans, holes in private pension
funds and massive government fiscal deficits. The
aging generation has been promised much more
than can delivered without dramatically damaging
the prospects of future generations. This will be a
political battle, a new form of class warfare over
scarce resources. Victory for the old guard would
hasten the decline of the West.

International demographers attending a meeting
in Berlin of the International Statistical Institute
warned last Friday that the world was failing to
face up to the economic, geopolitical and
environmental problems expected to surface
because of a rapidly aging, growing population
this century. "While the 20th century was the
century of population growth, we can already say
from a demographic perspective that the 21st
century will go into the history books as the
century of aging," said Wolfgang Lutz, of the
International Institute for Applied Systems
Analysis in Austria.

Demographic decline is especially apparent in
Europe. In most countries fertility is far below
replacement levels. Even if fertility recovered
quickly to levels that stabilized the population, the
new baby bulge would not bolster the work force
until almost all the post-1945 baby boom
generation was well into retirement.

Neither the state nor the private sector is in a
position to meet the promises made to the aging
generation. Tax and deficit levels are already high
and would have to rise by huge amounts to fund
pension promises. Tough political decisions will
have to be taken to change expectations.

The simplest way of meeting the immediate
demographic challenge would be to raise the
retirement age to reflect actual life spans. That will
happen eventually, but a rapid increase from 65 to
70 is needed now, regardless of previous promises
of retirement at 65 or less on generous pensions -
often of two-thirds of a worker's final salary.

A more modest increment in retirement age,
taking effect in 2010, say, would be too little, too
late. As it is, many fit people in their 60's enjoy
comfortable lives of leisure. Their numbers have
been swelled by generous early retirement
packages given on grounds of "getting rid of the
dead wood" or "reducing unemployment."

A steeper increase in the retirement age and/or a
radical reduction in promised pension levels
would be extremely unpopular among the huge
number of workers currently approaching
retirement. Yet such measures are essential to
avoid crippling taxes on the declining percentage
of people in work - which would be a further
deterrent to having child. Ideally the state should
be reducing tax burdens on young families and
taxing pensions for the able-bodied. Whether the
long-spoiled baby boomers are willing to concede
that such measures are necessary is another
matter. They have the votes to defeat any
government that would introduce them.

The overall situation is even worse than the
upcoming deficit in state pension systems
suggests. In the private sector, the shift from
pension schemes defined by benefits to schemes
defined by contributions has come too late. In the
United States there is an increasing likelihood of
huge shortfalls in private pension plans insured
by the federal Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation. Forthcoming retirees see these
defined benefits as a right. But should later
generations bear the burden of yet more
government debt to fund these shortfalls? An
equivalent situation exists in Britain.

Another private sector problem is the need for
companies to spend large amounts shoring up
pension funds rather than investing in new plant
or projects. That will slow economic growth,
adding to the woes caused by static or declining
work forces. Capital can replace labor in many
circumstances. But if the capital is not available
because resources are going into retiree
consumption, the result must be economic
decline.

An even more difficult issue is how much a society
should spend on keeping octogenarians alive for a
few additional months, or the victims of severe
strokes and Alzheimer's disease alive for years
without hope of meaningful recovery. Already a
very high proportion of health spending goes on
the last two years of a person's life and on care for
the very old.

Even in the United States, the public sector is
funding 60 percent of long-term care. Who will
fund long-term care when the baby boomers are
in their 80's? Society will have to reappraise its
attitude to death. That is at least in part a political
decision. Those approaching retirement are
unlikely to welcome any change that takes them
off life support earlier.

Opinion polls suggest that young people are
increasingly detached from the current political
process. Their commitment to democratic
processes could be further undermined if they
decide that the power of the ballot works against
them.

As it is, politicians in the West are increasingly
chasing the votes of the old. It cannot be long
before those under 40 see the need to organize
politically to fight for their own interests, and
those of future generations.


iht.com