鈥楤oomers vs Gen Z鈥 narrative hides the class divide

December 8, 2023
Issue 
Rallying for public housing and rent relief in February, Gadi/Sydney. Photo: Peter Boyle

First, it was young people spend too much on unnecessary products like . Now, as the housing and wages crises deepen for young people, blame has shifted.

The , , and are running a succession of pieces that pin blame for the growing wealth divide on 鈥済reedy boomers鈥.

But are Baby Boomers 鈥 those born in the mid-20th century 鈥 really to blame?

Or is it neoliberalism鈥檚 push for profits-at-all-costs exacerbating the wealth divide that is hitting young people the hardest?

A by Monash University, released in November, found that the cost-of-living crisis is having a severe impact on young people.

The 2023 Australian Youth Barometer report surveyed 571 18鈥24鈥搚ear鈥搊lds and combined the results with data from previous studies.

It found a whopping 9 in 10 people experienced financial difficulties in the past year.

One in five experienced food insecurity, 44% experienced unemployment and 40% felt they may not have a comfortable place to live in the next 12 months.

Researcher Professor Lucas Walsh told 聽that the COVID-19 pandemic, rampant inflation and a lack of available rentals had 鈥渃reated a perfect storm that is affecting young people negatively鈥.

With wages and living standards falling, young people on junior rates and insecure short-term contracts are聽bearing the brunt.

On housing, young people are being forced to live at home longer than their parents or grandparents did.

The Monash study found that 54% live in their family home. It found that 70% from richer families 鈥斅爓ith access to spare rooms and ample study space 鈥斅燼nd 38% of those from lower socioeconomic backgrounds still live at home.

This is not by choice: the rental vacancy rate reached a record low of 1.1% in September and , making it impossible for those earning an average wage.

Pitting Gen Z against boomers聽is an easy way to avoid scruntinising the system that perpetuates and maintains the wealth divide 鈥 capitalism.

If governments refuse to ensure housing is a human right, they will plan to ensure developers鈥 and investors鈥 rights to profiteer.

We can see the cost-of-living crisis is impacting people along class lines, not generational ones.

Older women are the fastest growing聽cohort of homeless people. by Swinburne University in August shows a growing number聽of those 55 and older are renting and struggling with rising housing costs.

Nearly 250,000 older people from low-income households were already paying unaffordable rents in 2019鈥20.

The Australian Youth Barometer claims that young people face 鈥渧astly different structural pressures鈥 than previous generations and that 鈥渢he traditional notion of working hard to become successful has become diluted鈥.

But that 鈥渢raditional notion鈥 was always a myth: it was designed to make the already wealthy feel deserving, and push working-class people to work harder.

The 鈥渟tructural pressures鈥 experienced by young people are not new. The cost-of-living, housing and other crises are central to capitalism.

For the establishment media, the other alleged culprits are 鈥渕igrants鈥.

Corporate mouthpiece the聽 claimed in September that high immigration numbers are the 鈥渞oot cause鈥 of the housing crisis. But the housing crisis predates the current increase in migrant numbers. Blaming migrants is just another distraction from the government鈥檚 refusal to address the commodification of housing.

As the war in Gaza rages and corporate media bosses censor their reporters, young people can clearly see how the establishment sells 鈥渃ulture wars鈥 and outrage while obfuscating the real issues.

This is why young people, in particular, are seeking out alternative media, or find their news direct from social media feeds.

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