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Comforting Words for Young Workers

Comment

Many speak of Gen X and Gen Y as "lost generations" destined to "not live as well" as their parents. A new Urban Institute study finds that young people up to the age of 40 haven't accumulated as much wealth as their parents did at their age. They face a bleak economic future, breaking a pattern of generational advancement.

The numbers may be right, but is the worry warranted? Time always will tell, but let's say this: Lots of shaky assumptions go into predicting how well today's young will live, starting with defining what it means to live well. It may be that today's young people end up living better, way better, than their parents — and by several measures, not just money.

The Urban Institute report focuses on one yardstick: wealth. It states that because investing and savings generate more wealth over the years, losing a decade of accumulation is especially serious.

Several financial setbacks certainly hit young adults hard. Many bought their first homes right before real estate values collapsed. They may now owe more on their houses than the properties are worth: Their mortgages are "underwater." They may be weighed down with student debt and frustrated by stagnant wages, a phenomenon predating the Great Recession.

Financially stressed young workers have been likened to their grandparents or great-grandparents, whose expectations fell and optimism dimmed in the Great Depression. That is not an entirely bad thing. The young people scarred by the economic calamity of the 1930s developed habits of thrift and caution that served them quite well in the post-World War II recovery — unlike much of the baby boom generation.

Middle-aged people traditionally save money and reduce debt for their later years. Many boomers, raised in the age of plenty, did not.

The Center for Economic and Policy Research reported in 2009 that 30 percent of homeowners aged 45 to 54 were underwater on their mortgages. They had feasted off rising home prices. Today's struggling young people will probably be more careful.

Also, many will have more time to make up for their youthful financial mistakes. Medical progress points to longer and healthier lives, at least for those who take care of themselves. This, like cleaner air, is one of the many marks of living well that don't easily translate into dollars.

Today, a low-income 55-year-old suffering serious heart disease has a better medical prognosis than did a multimillionaire of the same age and condition in 1960. Who would you say has/had the better life?

Chances are, younger Americans will also be working longer, enjoying perhaps 10 more years of wealth accumulation. (Full-time mothers concerned about losing economic ground in their child-rearing years should think about that.)

But is working longer a step backward? Not necessarily. That would depend on what kind of work you do and the career path you follow.

The common career pattern is illogical. Workers typically advance to the highest level of responsibility as they approach retirement age. Why can't the line be shaped like a pyramid, rather than the vapor trail of a jet taking off? One could rise in the early years, eventually hit the "top," then decelerate in terms of stress, hours and pay.

Many of today's Americans aged 65 and far older would jump at the chance to keep working, just not as hard. Some are even starting small businesses rather than face 25 years of enforced boredom and inadequate income.

Given the choice between more years and more money, most elderly people would choose the years. And years are what the young people have. Pessimism is clearly wasted on the young.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators webpage at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2013 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.?

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Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
Its hard to comfort a group of people that will take on a 17 trillion dollar+ debt and face healthcare cost that start at 20k for a family of 4. The minor positive "what if" scenarios this article provides pales in comparison to the myraid of problems young people will face.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Tue Mar 19, 2013 6:18 AM
Re: Chris McCoy;...Sir... A bunch of numbers on paper is not a debt, but a math problem... The people could get rid of it with a hard sneeze...If the thing was run up in order to maintain high profit and avoid taxing the rich out of those profits, then tax them now, and taze them if they run...
If the thing was run up to defend business abroad that has only left America to avoid fair labor prices, and environmental regulations then bring it home with the last gasp of the military, and make it once again a part of the commonwealth...
Now sir; if you will trouble yourself to read any of our early Supreme Court rulings, you will find one preventing the sale of Indian lands by Indians, written by John Marshall... He claims title for this land for the whole people, and this is true of all commonwealths, as republics are... I ask you to consider giving up your fear of the specious national debt, to consider why the commonwealth has been let out of the public grasp, if not, in order to see it productive enough to support the population and the government...
The title to this land is held by the people... What people get with property has always been rights in that property which have not ever once in history been exclusive, or free and clear... Not even kings in feudal days owned their countries, and most only owned their own estates amid other lords owning theirs, and they shared their rights with peasants who had their own rights in the land...
Be responsible for your own knowledge and you will find we promote an untenable view of property which denies its obligation, and denies in that fashion the ability of government to defend it, which comes at a cost...Property will never be cheap until it is taxed...Money will always be dear until it is taxed and until property comes with a price people can afford...When people do not have to work that much harder to support government with wages, they will need to work less and probably will, making room for others...
If you tax the rich out of the advantages of high profits, they may find they have wealth to share before taxes... It would be better to see corporation generous with their communities and workers instead of tossing pennies around like dumbells... You could help busunesses stay put with tax structure just as you have made it easy for them to leave town... You could encourage collective bargaining in the same way that it has been forbidden, with a change of perspective on property law, but that is not superior to government acting as our union, and demanding justice for all...
You see this mountain of dollars in all those digit... Either the money is there or it is not... Either the poverty end of the dollar trail can be picked up and fixed, or it cannot... The international sewer of our tax dollars is easy to fix, but not without curing ourselves of capitalism which is naturally international...Capitalism builds those debts by profiting on the denial of social obligation... If that can be prevented; then fine... If not; then we have to say it is just numbers and that the rich owe us a lot of numbers to make all our lives right...
Comment: #2
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Mar 19, 2013 8:00 AM
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