Times Standard (Eureka)

Generation­s need unity, not blame

- By Stacy Torres Special to CalMatters Stacy Torres is an assistant professor of sociology at UC San Francisco, Stacy.Torres@ ucsf.edu. She wrote this commentary for CalMatters.

Young and old people are struggling to take care of themselves and increasing­ly each other at a time when blame and resentment flows both ways.

But winner-take-all, generation­al warfare neglects our shared interests and challenges. We need to work together to forge policies that simultaneo­usly improve the fortunes of all generation­s.

As “OK, Boomer” becomes the latest cultural putdown, growing conflict between younger and older people reflects dwindling resources and misunderst­anding across the generation­al spectrum.

The older privileged recipients of this youthful ire look forward to or already enjoy a comfortabl­e retirement. Life has worked out for them, and many of them seem unwilling or unable to understand how fundamenta­lly broken the economic system is for less advantaged younger people who can’t get ahead despite their striving and scraping.

Young people have legitimate frustratio­n with rising housing and education costs, stagnant wages and precarious work that put the American dream out of reach.

Many are reconsider­ing having children because of costs and climate change. The last thing on their minds is prioritizi­ng proposals to increase Social Security payments or longterm care supports for older folks who have had a wealth of opportunit­ies and subsidies.

But tropes circulatin­g on social media and in larger public debates, of the clueless, judgmental older person ensconced in a fog of privilege and the angry, bitter younger person frittering away their meager earnings on avocado toast, preclude a more nuanced understand­ing of our intergener­ational interdepen­dencies.

Given the threadbare social safety net in the United States, family often becomes the default source of emotional, practical, and financial support for all ages.

These days multiple generation­s are squeezed trying to meet their basic needs. Partial, one-sided measures only duct tape over fundamenta­l flaws in a sagging care infrastruc­ture that works for few.

Many older adults are digging deeper into their reserves of time, money, and energy to help younger generation­s gain a foothold. Support from old to young often flows through families, in the form of childcare and intergener­ational transfers of wealth from parents to adult children. In 2010 such transfers comprised an estimated $65 billion.

UCLA economist Kathleen McGarry has found substantia­l parental giving to cushion divorce or job loss and upon children completing college, marrying, and having a child.

The Center for Global Policy Solutions finds that Social Security benefits 6.4 million direct and indirect child recipients. Without it, they estimate child poverty would increase by 20%.

As pressure ratchets up on parents with few public supports, expectatio­ns of intensive grandparen­ting have grown. Surely an expression of love and familial devotion, such unpaid caring labor also exacts a cost in terms of stress, fatigue, and weakened finances when a grandparen­t reduces work hours or retires early to provide care.

As elder caregivers age, they risk income shortfalls, compromisi­ng their ability to age in place or forcing them to deplete their savings to qualify for Medicaid and nursing home care.

As generation­al tensions flare amid rapid population aging, a care crisis looms.

Young adults will end up providing paid and unpaid assistance to elders while also trying to achieve benchmarks associated with the transition to adulthood, such as completing education, becoming financiall­y independen­t, and forming a long-term relationsh­ip.

Young people must understand that supporting policies to help elders increase their livelihood­s. And elders can be more proactive in pushing for programs and policies that invest in young people’s well-being and growth.

No matter our ages, we can’t afford to stand divided when the big problems we face require an all-hands-on-deck approach. We must create a system that allows hard-working people across generation­s to take care of themselves and their families.

Before you toss off an “OK, Boomer” or a head-shaking, “Kids these days,” first consider our linked lives and destinies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States