Oct 18, 2011

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downward mobility is not just a scary sound bite. It’s a real possibility.” Samuelson

EDITOR’S COMMENT: The largest impact is on the children. Our children — expecting and needing their parents to protect, provide and nourish them to adulthood with good values and commitment to our society — are being systematically undermined by our actions and inactions.

If you look at the numbers that everyone agrees are valid, there are some 100 million Americans who are in unworkable situations in which they are stressed out beyond reason, with no help from government, friends or family all of whom are virtually bankrupt. Children coming into this world are presented with hopeless parents who have little other than spiritual faith (if that) to get them through the day, with no time for parenting, nurturing, guiding and teaching.

In a world of progress, life is driven by hope and optimism, creativity and ambition. At the moment virtually every part of our society is under pressure, undermining any possibility that the parents will communicate hope, ambition, morality, creativity or optimism. The number of economically driven suicides is skyrocketing as you have seen on these pages and those of other bloggers and media. For every person who commits suicide there are probably hundreds who are thinking about it rather than face the prospect of admitting to their spouse and children that the situation is dire.

I hope there is enough hope left in this country that we will insist on restoring normal discourse and practical problem solving. Failing that, what will our world and the world of our children’s children look like when it is driven by depressed, unambitious people whose creativity and drive was stomped out of them when they were developing as children? If I may paraphrase a statement from Golda Meier: this will change when we care more about our grandchildren than we do about our grandfathers. Every step we take should be toward the goal of producing a brighter future together, and every attempt to divide us in that endeavor should be met with total rejection.

Robert J. Samuelson
Robert J. Samuelson
Opinion Writer for Washington Post

Why our children’s future no longer looks so bright

By , Published: October 16

Aspecter haunts America: downward mobility. Every generation, we believe, should live better than its predecessor. By and large, Americans still embrace that promise. A Pew survey earlier this year found that 48 percent of respondents felt that their children’s living standards would exceed their own. Although that’s down from 61 percent in 2002, it’s on a par with the mid-1990s. But these expectations could be dashed. For young Americans, the future could be dimmer.

Along with jobs, the 2012 presidential election could be fought over this issue. “Can the Middle Class Be Saved?” worried a recent cover story in the Atlantic. Pessimism rises with schooling. In the Pew poll, 54 percent of respondents with a high-school diploma or less felt their children would do better; only 35 percent of graduate school alums agreed. “A kind of depression has set in,” writes Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen. “We’ve lost our mojo, our groove.”

Robert J. Samuelson

Samuelson writes a weekly economics column.

It can be argued that all this glumness repeats a historical error: projecting the present onto the future. Just because the economy is rotten today doesn’t mean that it will always be. After World War II, the Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert Fogel has recalled, there was widespread “alarm about massive unemployment.” Eleven million veterans and 9 million defense industry workers had to be re-employed. People feared a new Depression. It didn’t happen, because pent-up demand for homes, cars and appliances fueled a hiring boom.

Unfortunately, this caveat is only half relevant now. Our future would certainly be brighter if the economy resumed strong growth, but that wouldn’t automatically ensure higher living standards. A society generates those through productivity — increases in efficiency, technology or business organization that lower costs or enable firms to pay higher wages. Without higher productivity, broad living standards won’t rise. But even with it, the young may not enjoy gains.

The explanation is that productivity improvements have already been committed to demographic trends we can’t alter (aging) or problems we haven’t addressed (runaway health costs, deteriorating infrastructure). Future productivity and income gains will be diverted to these uses: higher taxes to pay for an older population; health spending; and taxes and fees to repair roads, schools and water systems.

It’s already happening. “A decade of health care cost growth has wiped out real income gains for an average U.S. family,” report two Rand Corp. researchers in the journal Health Affairs. From 1999 to 2009, total compensation of a typical four-member family with employer-paid health insurance rose by $23,000. About 95 percent of this (almost $22,000) went to inflation and health care, including employer costs, family premiums, out-of-pocket payments and taxes. For most families, higher costs didn’t deliver parallel benefits. The reason: Health spending is concentrated; the sickest 5 percent account for half the total.

Meanwhile, spendable incomes — what people consider their living standards — stagnate. The squeeze will continue. In 1990, there were 32 million Americans 65 and over; by 2040, that’s reckoned at 80 million. Rising costs for Social Security and Medicare have created a new political dynamic: If benefits for the elderly aren’t cut, burdens on the young will go up. Decaying infrastructure poses similar choices. Either pay for repairs or tolerate substandard roads and dilapidated schools.

Our children’s futures have been heavily mortgaged. That’s true even if the economy returns in a few years to “full employment” (say, 5 percent unemployment) and past productivity gains (about 1.7 percent annually since 1966) continue. If today’s weak recovery persists, the outlook darkens. Unemployment will remain high, say 7 percent to 9 percent. Wage increases will remain depressed. Young workers will have trouble finding jobs to develop the skills and contacts that lead to better jobs. Productivity growth might falter.

America is a competitive society. It’s not guaranteed that children achieve their parents’ relative economic status: The children of parents in the richest 20 percent won’t automatically stay in the richest 20 percent. Some children advance; some fall. But if overall incomes are rising, even those who don’t advance relatively often have higher absolute incomes than their parents. Studies by the Pew Economic Mobility Project confirm this. Two-thirds of Americans have higher incomes than their parents; half of those either ranked in the same spot of the economic distribution as their parents or lower.

Generational gains tempered individual setbacks. We may now lose this comforting cushion. Our leaders might try to avoid that by boosting economic growth, controlling health spending and trimming benefits for the elderly. But we aren’t sure how to do the first and lack the political will to do the second and third. The future is never entirely predictable, but downward mobility is not just a scary sound bite. It’s a real possibility.

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