Penticton Herald

This will leave a scar

- By SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS

People under the age of 30 will pay a dear price for the global pandemic and could even be renamed the COVID-19 generation.

After almost five months, most would agree that the older generation­s – although perhaps medically affected by COVID-19 – have been largely unscathed economical­ly.

Baby boomers and older generation­s have lived long enough to have careers, raised children and see their pensions turned into annuities. COVID-19 won’t affect them as much.

Generation X members will also be sparred as they have been given a fair shot at life in general, minus a couple of major bumps, such as the 2008 recession and the dot.com bust.

The newly-designated COVID-19 generation, however, is another matter.

Some argue that a generation can hardly be defined by books written by people presenting an array of theories. There’s some truth to that. Generation Xers, millennial­s and Generation Z members were born out of fiction, in a sense. A series of hypotheses led social scientists to suppose that a large group of individual­s share common values and see the world in similar prescribed ways.

Boomers, on the other hand, were delineated by the Second World War, which in and of itself was a very powerful, transforma­tional moment. It was global and many lives were destroyed, ruined and changed forever. Wars change the world.

COVID-19 has similarly disrupted many lives, unfairly punishing the underprivi­leged, women and minorities. It has even discrimina­ted against people with other fatal illnesses like cancer and cardiovasc­ular diseases.

For months, the entire globe has been focused on one thing: COVID-19.

COVID-19 is a true threat to humanity, make no mistake. With little science, measures had to be taken whether we agreed with them or not. COVID-19 will mark many lives by the time it’s done – and humanity’s reaction to it will impact billions of lives.

The lockdowns, and the economic wrath that followed, will leave a definite scar on the lives of many young people.

The COVID-19 generation will build what German sociologis­t Ulrich Beck called a risk society. It will be the opposite of what most past generation­s have experience­d, which is the influence and dominance of the nation state. The nation state society is focused on the production of wealth and comfort for the majority.

A risk society will be obsessed with potential future disasters and devastatin­g occurrence­s. Some argue that our modern society was already there. Certainly, the nation state’s ability to fully distribute wealth has often been disputed.

The COVID-19 generation will likely accept that all new risks are inherently created by humans. Modernity and progress, then, are seen as threats rather than solutions. Younger people will see global risks like climate change very differentl­y. Important risks for the COVID-19 generation will often be borderless and pointing at who’s responsibl­e will be almost unfeasible.

It’s a very different way to see the world.

In food production, some risks will be given a second and more committed look. Think of food safety and how to mitigate risks across supply chains. And the role of genetic engineerin­g in agricultur­e may be more frequently questioned.

If a cultivar is created or a new food product is launched, a generation fixated on risks will accept that potential human diseases and food recalls are created simultaneo­usly. Risks related to globalized industrial food production models may no longer be the side effects of progress, but rather seen as a prominent focus for society.

Most countries will come out of this crisis deeply in debt and politicall­y fractured. Some observers suggest the COVID-19 generation will lean toward an eco-socialist perspectiv­e, but this doesn’t by itself address broader needs.

COVID-19 will likely create a generation for which wealth creation is not the answer but rather the source of societal ills.

In the end, perhaps young people severely affected by COVID-19 may follow the path laid out by older generation­s. But at the very least, they deserve to be heard when the time is right.

Dr. Sylvain Charlebois is senior director of the agri-food analytics lab and a professor in food distributi­on and policy at Dalhousie University.

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