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Baby boom generation starting to retire in or around 2030

1235

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,544 ✭✭✭✭Tony EH


    I wouldn't be so quick to blame Fine Gael. Pretty much every country is struggling with this.

    Maybe. But as far as this country is concerned FG are to largely blame for where our current crises come from with regards to housing and health. Hey, you know what, chuck FF on the fire too, because they're no better.

    I'm convinced that this will only get worse because it can. Like, if someone built 10,000 affordable 2-bed flats in Dublin tomorrow, they'd get hoovered up by hedge funds, vulture funds, and whatever else. The issue is political will as you've said and it's not going to improve.

    Agreed. It can, and probably will, get much worse. In fact, the whole thing might go belly up again.

    However, the issue is not just more dogboxes, it's homes that people can actually afford without the need to burden themselves with a debt that will still be around their necks when they're OAPs.

    Frankly, I think we need to build more state housing, like the way Britain did after the war. State builds them, and you rent from the state.

    Not some offshore bastard who's only interest is in their profit.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,592 ✭✭✭✭hotmail.com


    Ireland's population fell in this period and only rose slowly from 1966 onwards. Our post war experience, a war we did not take part in like the other countries in the West, is completely different.

    If there is an excess amount of people from this period, a significant amount of them don't live in Ireland.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,253 ✭✭✭jackofalltrades


    Highly skilled workers are already emigrating en masse. Australia is taking a load of our doctors and nurses and has moved on to recruiting our experienced Gards. The state launched a campaign to entice builders home. Increasing taxes on wages will only accelerate this exodus and dissuade multinationals from setting up here.

    And the people that are left behind to pay these higher taxes will have less disposable income, so will have even less kids.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,690 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    It's complex. On the one hand, the declining working age cohort will resent paying higher taxes to fund the pensions of the growing retirement age cohort. On the other hand, the retirement age cohort are the parents and grandparents of the working age cohort, and the working age cohort does care about them. If retirement incomes are squeezed, not just retired voters but a fair chunk of working age voters will be upset.

    Or, to put it another way: would you rather pay an additional 1% in social insurance contributions or have Great Aunt Gertie come and live with you? Because that, in a nutshell, is the trade-off that will have to be made.

    Post edited by Peregrinus on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,457 ✭✭✭SharkMX


    This sorta reminds me of a conversation I had with my cousin just before Christmas.

    He is 42 and his girlfriend is 40 and they have one 5 year old. Its a medical impossibility for them to have ore children so they will only just have one and they had just got this news a few weeks before this conversation happened.

    The conversation was full of regret and he was blaming himself for the situation. Some of the tings he said were that he only got started with his life really at 25 years old due to spending so long in education. He then went traveling for a few years and only came home when he was 30. He spent a few years sewing his wild oats using apps for hookups instead of dating. Then he met his gf at work and they went of traveling for a couple of years together. They came came and lived in my aunts for a few years not really saving much or not putting anything into pensions. Then she got pregnant by accident and they moved into a rented apartment. Now they have settled down and they want a house and more children and thy can have neither at this point in their lives.

    It was a very tearful night but he was filled with regret about not engaging with life earlier and while he had a great time, the rest of his life is not going to be what he thought it was. I always thought after that conversation the mine and his generations usually do things the opposite way around to what our parents did. We go have a good time first and then struggle in the years when we should be nearly finished getting our nest and children raised (and having to spend 8 - 10 years more than your parents or grand parents did in education doesnt help either.)

    Im in my early 30s, got my house recently and next will be children, but ive been putting money into a pension since i got my first job on my fathers advice. Parents generation would have left education much earlier, got married, saved and bought any old fixer upper they could afford. Then had their kids right away whether they could afford them or not (usually not, bu they got by) and then stop having kids, all of who would have been raised by the time they were 40. Got it all out of the way to they could relax in the twilight of their lives. And here is us only thinking about settling down and having kids mid 30s or 40s now. I wish I had of realized that in my early 20s, but it could be worse, at least i realized it a few years ago.



  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 39,561 CMod ✭✭✭✭ancapailldorcha


    I suspect there's also no shortage of parents disgruntled about their adult children still living with them.

    The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God.

    Leviticus 19:34



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,690 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    I'm sure you're right. But that's not a problem that will be solved by cutting or freezing the old-age pension or similar measures.

    What it might do, at least in theory, is to encourage people who have reached retirement age, who own their own homes (i.e. their mortgage is cleared) and who still have adult children living with them to sell their homes, downsize to something considerably smaller as a retirement home for themselves, and give their kids a big wodge of cash towards the purchase of a home of their own. And if such a trend were to develop it would lead to an increase in the rate at which suitable family homes, as opposed to starter homes for childless young adults, come onto the market.



  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 39,561 CMod ✭✭✭✭ancapailldorcha


    Of course not. I'm not saying it would be but we've reached the point where I think that those with assets should have to pay something for their own care. It's a non-runner for political reasons but the idea of someone sitting on a million pound asset still getting the full pension is a bit perverse given the cost of living for those who have to work, particularly for people on minimum wage.

    The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God.

    Leviticus 19:34



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,690 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    We've a transitional problem here.

    The contributory old-age pension is an insurance scheme. (Hence the name "social insurance".) The risk that people face is living a long time with no earnings. By paying social insurance contributions they insure against that risk; they are guaranteed a modest retirement income for life and, if they live a very long time, the payments they receive will aggregate to a very large amount. This is of course cross-subsidised by those who paid the same social insurance contributions but die before retirement age, or shortly after retirement age; they get little or nothing out of the scheme, in financial terms. But everyone who participates in the scheme gets the assurance that, should this risk eventuate for them, they will be protected. That's how insurance works.

    Right. Someone who retires today has already paid all the social insurance contributions. This is a done deal. You can't turn around now and tell them "Sorry, we've changed our minds. This insurance arrangement is cancelled, and you're not getting the cover we promised you."

    Which means that, even if you decide to terminate the contributory retirement pension tomorrow, you're still going to have to pay out all the pensions that people have accrued with the contributions they have paid up to today. And it will take many, many decades to run off that liability.

    Which, in turn, means that if you terminate the contributory retirement pension and terminate or reduce social insurance contributions, you're going to have to replace the lost revenue by putting up some other tax, to fund the pensions that still have to be paid. So you still have a situation where currenttaxpayers have to support current retirees.

    Of course, you don't have to do that by putting up income tax — any tax will do. And if you want to link this to the housing crisis, one possibility is to impose a US-style annual property tax, of a significant amount, on the value of everybody's home. That would encourage people at retirement, when their income is going down, to downsize to smaller, less valuable homes, so as to reduce the demands which property tax makes on their modest retirement income. This would mean more houses would come on the market. It would also tend to drive down house prices; as the financial liabilities attached to an asset increase, the value of the asset declines.

    The people of working age who would buy all the family homes coming on to the market would then have to pay the swingeing property tax, so you'd still have people of working age paying tax to fund retirement income for their parents' dgeneration — it would be property tax rather than social insurance contributions, but a euro of property tax costs the same as a euro of social insurance contributions.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,457 ✭✭✭SharkMX


    Yeah I can see how the people who want everything given to them without having to earn it would rather not pay tax on it alright.

    Maybe we should all become TDs, you know just so we can implement any idea we might have.



  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 39,561 CMod ✭✭✭✭ancapailldorcha


    I'm not advocating cutting or eliminating pensions at all, to be clear. All I am saying is that older people with assets should have to pay some of that for their own medical and/or social care. We already means test unemployment benefit so I don't see why the same can't be done for senior care, aside from politics of course.

    David Cameron once told Nick Clegg that nothing gets donors handing money to the Conservative party as quickly or as effectively as the threat from the left/centre of a property tax. It's another unicorn, the same breed as Theresa May's proposed care reforms.

    The pension system, at least here in the UK, operates in tandem with the idea of a property own democracy, ie pensioners do not pay rent or a mortgage for the most part. I know that, if I am lucky, I will get old and need one myself but right now, it doesn't even cover 80% of the cost of the rent of my bedroom. I struggle to see what good it will be if I get old enough to claim it, beyond a top up on whatever income I may be getting at the time.

    To be clear once again, I do not advocate cutting pensions. I don't think I ever did on this thread unless I got sloppy with my words. Even if I did, it's a non-runner. No politician is that stupid. Well, maybe Liz Truss but that's a topic for another thread…

    The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God.

    Leviticus 19:34



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,690 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    Older people who require residential care and who have assets do have to have recourse to their assets to pay for it - the Fair Deal scheme effectively functions like a mortgaging arrangement, with the costs of social care secured with a charge on the house, to be repaid on sale or after death.

    Other forms of medical/social care are not funded in this way, but the more older people's wealth is represented by the value of their house, the more unrealistic it is to think of asking them to fund their ongoing medical/care expenses by selling the houses in which they live. You could, I suppose, extend the Fair Deal scheme so that it applies to things like home visits but, honestly, relative to the amount spent on retirement pensions, you'd be doing an awful lot of work and causing an awful lot of upset to recover a comparatively small amount of money.



  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 39,561 CMod ✭✭✭✭ancapailldorcha


    I find it very difficult to sympathise if I am being honest. I'm likely to, at best own a studio while paying for their care. It seems unfair that they should get to keep owning an asset like that while paying nothing themselves for it. I don't know what the best solution is but this is the result of generations of governments elected by boomers torching the social contract.

    There's always upset at any form of change. Look at what happened when Macron tried to raise the pension age two years to 64. At some point, boomers are going to have to realise that they're not the dominant demographic any more. Well, either that or they'll die off given their ages.

    The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God.

    Leviticus 19:34



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,894 ✭✭✭monkeybutter


    eveyone competes with everyone else

    that is life, its always been that way

    of course it matters if you save, I know loads who never saved, moved back in with parents to start saving for a mortgage

    of course you are going to struggle

    I know loads of people who have somehow afforded to do this earlier, most of my friends have waited like I did, for life reasons

    the curve is the curve, you literally have that time to have kids, its not an opinion random woman on the internet



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,894 ✭✭✭monkeybutter


    paying nothing for the asset?

    how did they manage to acquire the asset for nothing

    boomers, you really need to take a few weeks off the internet



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  • Registered Users Posts: 192 ✭✭AnnieinDundrum


    there are certain aspects to elder care.

    The HSE provide home helps, via agencies, to help keep people in their homes. This is excellent and a good idea for society. And most people that I’ve met say their parents prefer it.

    This care isn’t means tested but it rationed to those who need it, approved by medical people etc.most families add to this by weighing in themselves or by paying for any extras needed.

    there are also grants and tax deductions and vat refunds for alternations and items such as accessible ramps.

    If the same people were to move to residential care the state would pay a lot more so it makes economic sense too. AFAIK

    But I understand that under various fair deal schemes the state would get some money back for this care.

    I’d love to see the maths.

    Cost of a decade in a nursing home but with refunds from fair deal v cost of home help with no refunds.


    i suspect the home help model is still cheaper from the states perspective.


    but I do see many people in their 90s still living independently. Also a fair few in nursing homes.


    Pensions were designed to stretch for a few years, not decades.




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,890 ✭✭✭CelticRambler


    This anecdote, and @Shelga's testimony - along with the parallel thread on early retirement - demonstrate the overwhelming success of marketing, where everything is turned into a cost-benefit financial equation. On the one hand, we (in the developed world) are promised that we can have everything - greate job, nice house, happy family, long life and good health ; but on the other, we're threatened that The World Will End if we don't spend-save-spend-spend-save-spend money as fast as we earn it.

    Where once people bought houses because they wanted a decent place to live, now the process is treated as "the most important investment you'll ever make" ; then they saddle themselves with the maximum amount of debt the bank will give them, for the longest period of time, so that they can - in Ireland, at least - bid against other wannabe homeowners to drive the price to ridiculous heights.

    Now, when people think about having children, they cite the "cost of raising a child" as a deciding factor ; yet much of that cost is driven primarily by voluntary consumption of entirely insubstantial services. As can be seen on this forum (and I see it with my Irish-resident siblings and cousins), parents spend what are to me (non-resident) incomprehensible sums on supervised/coordinated activities for their children, and even more astronomical sums on holiday experiences for no real benefit to either parent or child.

    Except, perhaps, to convince them that they - like @SharkMX's friend - can have it all as soon as they leave college … and find that perfect job … and keep that perfect job, bearing in mind that they're going to be treated by their corporate employer as nothing more than an economic unit that has to fall on the right side of the cost-benefit equation. And then they're told that they're going to need a pension pot of 2 million to be "comfortable" if/when they retire, so they vote for the politicians that promise to protect whatever wealth they can ferret away, thus ensuring the whole system becomes increasingly ricketty.

    Funnily enough, the majority of "baby boomers" I know are already long retired, or at least working entirely at their own rhythm; and myself and my "Gen X" peers are definitely not waiting till 2030 to start retiring. Something we all have in common is that we never let the cost of some future life stop us from making the most of the life we had at the time.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,016 ✭✭✭Shelga


    I can assure you, no woman is unaware of the fact that there is limited time to have a baby.

    What are your suggestions for tackling the issue of men aged 30+ with less interest than ever before in having children?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,544 ✭✭✭✭Tony EH


    Where once people bought houses because they wanted a decent place to live, now the process is treated as "the most important investment you'll ever make" ; then they saddle themselves with the maximum amount of debt the bank will give them, for the longest period of time, so that they can - in Ireland, at least - bid against other wannabe homeowners
    to drive the price to ridiculous heights.

    And we desperately need to get away from that mindset. Unfortunately, over the last few decades, people have been primed to look at homes as "assets" or "property". A tradable commodity. Something that's merely a saleable object and not what it used to be. A place to actually live in, put down roots and raise a family. The next generation.

    Our property woes has its seeds in the Celtic Tiger, when this country first got a bit of money and we lost the bloody run of ourselves in many respects. House prices started to go through the roof, when before they were pretty stable, on the whole. Buying a home was attainable for anyone, if you had a job and put a bit by. Nowadays, for many people, it doesn't matter if you're working (and even if your partner's working), because you've been priced out of a "market".



  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 39,561 CMod ✭✭✭✭ancapailldorcha


    There's a limit for men as well. It's less stringent but it's there nevertheless. Like, if I sort myself out and I'm 45, how many women will want to have a baby with a man that age? I know it's not the same thing as the biological clock but it's worth mentioning.

    As for your question, I would suggest that women take charge of their dating lives. If they want to ask someone out, they should consider doing it themselves. A lot of men won't bother making the first move any more in case they appear sleazy. Personally, I just can't be bothered any more. I work in a mainly female environment and I think I've had a few signs of interest but I like my own time and the ability to do what I want. Women who have successful careers may need to be open to dating less successful men depending on how much they want marriage and children.

    The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God.

    Leviticus 19:34



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,457 ✭✭✭SharkMX


    I grabbed my other half by the hand as she was passing in a niteclub and pulled her into me, trapping her between myself and the wall. I said something drunken too her and we had a dance and a shift. And the rest is history. We now have bought a house together and are going to get married and start a family in the next year or two.

    That wasnt too long ago. And if I was to do that now i'd be in jail and she would be cancelled if she even attempted to say I wasnt a sexual predator. So it would have never happened and we would never have met in the first place.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,542 ✭✭✭yagan


    Ive a friend who'd love to meet someone but has zero interest in having kids.

    He's always upfront about this but repeatedly he'll having someone he's dating for a good while start at him about changing his mind.

    My wife has a friend who since childhood always wanted to be a mother, she married a guy who everyone knew is gay, they had kids, they still live together as a happy family but he always goes on holiday with his oldest friend.

    Btw, money was never an obstacle for her.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,894 ✭✭✭monkeybutter


    there are very few people I know who dont have kids, for every 10 its 1 person, so there is plenty of interest

    the consensus is enjoy life before having kids rather than after, that is more suitable to men than women, but it has been embraced wholesale in ireland

    Theres also too much put on how hard having kids is. Its a joy, do it. Those first years of life are special and nothing is better than that, is it harder than not having kids, of course, but its not even a discussion

    Maybe some of the former has droned out the latter

    I seriously doubt there isn't more interest in being a dad than ever before but that it has changed massively



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,894 ✭✭✭monkeybutter


    Nope, all people do is complain about politicians, like its spectator sport

    while sitting on their hoops



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,457 ✭✭✭SharkMX




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,894 ✭✭✭monkeybutter


    I never said you did, but you stuck your nose into another conversation for some reason

    now they are really the only people who can fix an issue like the one posted, not matter how poorly by the op





  • We need to stop classifying a house as a financial asset and more a basic amenity that everyone needs to survive. That's part of why we're in this mess. And a big part of why it costs so much to retire. Being saddled with huge debt your whole working life, just because you need somewhere to live, is absurd. Ultra capitalism, where everything is a commodity, is literally killing society. And yet, people continue to worship this lifestyle.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,894 ✭✭✭monkeybutter


    the thing is when was this not the case, at what point in our idyllic past was this utopia

    retirement is a new thing, other than a few elite

    you worked until you died basically

    it was made up in the middle to end of the 20th century with little forethought

    Post edited by Boards.ie: Mike on


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,161 ✭✭✭zerosquared




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,894 ✭✭✭monkeybutter


    america for one

    its all well and good having more money in wages, with much bigger outlays on rent etc. everything…



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,729 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    Both of your requests happen already.

    LT care is means-tested: Fair Deal scheme

    Medical card is means-tested. (GP Visit card is not, it is universal for all over 70)



  • Registered Users Posts: 192 ✭✭AnnieinDundrum


    pensions were introduced by Bismark in late 1800s and retirement age roughly equalled life expectancy 😂

    You can hardly fault people for living beyond that!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,016 ✭✭✭Shelga


    I also don’t think people view having children as some kind of cost/benefit calculation; it is rather the case that a decent person will give serious consideration to what is the biggest decision they will ever make.

    Can I provide this child/children a safe and pleasant home environment? Can I pay for crèche fees and after school care for approximately 10-12 years because I can’t afford to give up work because my house costs so much and also it took me a really long time to get to this place in my career? (This is one that still weighs heavier on women than on men)

    Can I teach this child how to be a good person? Can I afford clothes for it, a cot, nappies, a buggy, a car seat, etc? What will the climate be like when the child is 30? Is there going to be a land war in Europe? Is social media rotting kids’ brains these days and could I protect my child from its toxicity? Will I be able to afford to move to a bigger house in a few years as the child grows?

    The list goes on and on and on. Now, of course you could overthink it to death and never make a decision, but a lot of people don’t feel this deep-seated existential pull to have children, nor are they completely against it- I think lots of people are in the middle.

    Then there is the factor of having children because that’s just the next thing you do in life and is a box to be ticked- this is definitely a factor for some people. Then there are concerns of having a very sick or disabled child, and the supports not being available in Ireland, as we’ve heard repeatedly in recent years.

    Wouldn’t most decent people give serious consideration to these things before just jumping in? I actually don’t think it’s a cost/benefit thing at all, it’s about ensuring you can provide everything a child needs, before you ever get to after-school activities and holidays and all the rest of it. Yeah, people spend money on a lot of crap, but just the basics cost insane amounts of money these days.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,890 ✭✭✭CelticRambler


    a decent person will give serious consideration to what is the biggest decision they will ever make

    That's just it: your use of the term "decent person" immediately turns this into a cost-benefit decision, reinforced by everything you list afterwards. There are literally thousands of children born every year to "decent" people who, in the head of a passionate moment, don't give serious consideration to childbearing. Setting aside the choice (if available) of abortion, it's not a decision at all, let along the biggest one they'll make; and yet the vast majority of these unplanned children turn out fine, and so do their parents.

    The list that goes on and on and on are all reasons to justify something else in preference to having children - having a "nice" house, having a "good" career, having a "safe" future … Which are essentially all the same fear-mongering marketing tricks used to peddle all kinds of pension plans and other retirement schemes, and for the most part are little more than circular arguments: as you say yourself, the good job is needed to pay for the expensive house which is only expensive because so many people signed up for the programme that said "get a degree and you'll earn more money". Like dating apps, there's a huge amount of money to be made from selling the dream that something/someone better is waiting just around the corner, if you can hang on a little longer, buy another add-on, pay for some small thing to give you an advantage …

    As has been mentioned in the early-retirement thread, something that can shock quite a few not-so-early retirees is the simple fact that they are unable to embark on their retirement adventure, either because of health issues or socio-political challenges (e.g. Brexit) ; but that's only a problem because we've been encouraged to think of retirement as a period of happy old age, instead of the very functional "a short time to get your affairs in order before you die" concept originally set up.

    Perhaps, if the age at which you could draw your OAP was raised to 75 or 80, it might encourage more people to give serious consideration to changing their view on when to have children and how long to stay in the salaried workforce. I know that if I had my time over again, I would do things exactly as I did first time around : have my children close together in my 20s/30s, so they were grown up and gone independent while I was still a fit and healthy 50-something and free to do whatever I want.

    Except maybe have any more …



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,544 ✭✭✭✭Tony EH


    Perhaps, if the age at which you could draw your OAP was raised to 75 or 80

    How many 75 or 80 year olds do you know could do a full time job? Or even a part time one for that matter. It's all well and good for some people in some professions to say we should raise the pension age to such and such. But the reality is that most people in the old age bracket simply wouldn't be able to function in the workplace and an awful lot of people don't have the types of jobs that provide luxury down time and rest periods.

    In addition, and this is the biggest issue, ageism is a very real thing in the area of work. The biggest ism, especially in Ireland and the UK, is classism. But the next biggest is ageism. Once you reach a certain age, many employment opportunities are simply closed off to you. When someone reaches their mid 50's, they'll often find themselves in a position where it becomes harder and harder to get work, so raising the pension age to something like 75 means consigning a lot of people to the wilderness for a period of about 20 years.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,457 ✭✭✭SharkMX


    Oh, so im not allowed to post here then. I see how it is. Dont be so childish.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,890 ✭✭✭CelticRambler


    How many 75 or 80 year olds do you know could do a full time job? 

    I know dozens of 75- and 80-year olds who are still in good working order, mentally and physically, and invest a huge amount of time - and decades of experience - into non-salaried activities because they want to. They could do a full time job, but they wouldn't - no more than myself, and I'm a while off that age yet. There's no need, financial or otherwise.

    That's kind of the point: why does anyone need to work full time from about the age of 45-50 onwards? Right now, only because they've put off having children until they're already in their 30s and 40s, and because they've locked themselves into a 30-year mortgage also starting in their 30s. If you knew in your 20s that you might get 5 years of a full pension, chances are you'd arrange voluntarily arrange to curb your working life well before then, and maybe make significant life choices that made that easier.

    But I doubt any politician is ever going to propose such a scheme because (a) self-centred voters have convinced themselves that they're entitled to a long and happy retirement, paid for by someone else ; and (b) way too much of the country's tax revenue is sucked out of salaried employees - so as to leave unearned wealth and corporate profits alone - for any government to want to upset that particular apple cart.

    Politicians and voters alike want to keep the status quo, regardless of any warnings of impending collapse.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,544 ✭✭✭✭Tony EH


    I know dozens of 75- and 80-year olds who are still in good working order, mentally and physically, and invest a huge amount of time - and decades of experience - into non-salaried activities because they want to. They could do a full time job, but they wouldn't - no more than myself, and I'm a while off that age yet. There's no need, financial or otherwise.

    And I'd bet you there's plenty more that aren't doing any of that because they can't, and wouldn't be even remotely capable of doing a full time job or even a part time one. Especially the 80 year old bracket. Out of all the OAPs I currently know there's one guy who might be able to hold down a job at 71 and even he says he has days where he can barely get out of a chair because his back would go. He certainly is in no condition to do another 9 years of work.

    But I doubt any politician is ever going to propose such a scheme

    No politician would propose such a scheme, because it would a cruel madness to expect septuagenarians and octogenarians to work. The vast majority wouldn't have the physicality to do such a thing.

    We may be living longer. But it's not like it is when you're 30 years old and your prime. Some oldies may seem spritely, and in "good working order" (as you put it), but expecting them to put in a shift in a job is an entirely different matter.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,021 ✭✭✭✭anewme


    ahh jaysus, who wants to work till they are 75 or 80, able or not.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,890 ✭✭✭CelticRambler


    Yeah, but you're arguing that point on the basis that people should work "full time" until they collect their state pension. There's no need for anyone to do that, but the majority choose to do so, and then base their opposition to working for longer because they've organised their whole life plan around an expectation that they'll have a good long period of state-sponsored free time to do all the stuff they didn't prioritise earlier.

    Logically, there's no reason for today's youth to spend five or ten years in third-level education, when they could leave school at 18, get a trade and be making good money by their early twenties. 20k will buy you a decent house across large parts of Europe, and a trade is one of the most transferable skills, so that's not an unreasonable start in life. Meet a partner, have a few children within the next few years ; if they follow the same route, they'll be supporting themselves by the time our youth & partner are hitting fifty. From then on, our no-longer young youth can easily get by on part-time/intermittent work, making it far easier to continue working years longer than the current standard pension age.

    I've heard variations on this theme proposed in different countries for the last thirty or forty years, but none has ever introduced it: it always comes back to that same complaint "you can't expect people to work full time till they're 80" - i.e. refuse to contemplate changing anything about how we work, just up the retirement age to whatever the electorate will tolerate and squeeze as much tax out of those who slave away till they drop.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,579 ✭✭✭swampgas


    It's an interesting subject.

    It seems to me that the fundamental issue is that the government has far, far less power than people think. It doesn't get to tell people how many children to have, or when to have them. It can't stop people emigrating, although it has some control over immigration. It can't make people want to get married, or want to have children, nor can it stop people having 10 children if they want to. It can't make people downsize, or make older people move in with their children. All it can do is tinker with tax and social welfare, in a feeble attempt to nudge things one way or the other. Nor does the government get to control what happens in the outside world, not does it have a crystal ball to predict the future. Most politicians are just desperately trying to get reelected, i.e. trying to keep their job while providing for themselves and their families. Rocking the boat is not a good strategy for most of them.

    When I was leaving school in the 80s, Ireland was a poor country with too many young people chasing too few jobs. Everybody was leaving, myself included. Who could have predicted the 90s, the celtic tiger, the financial crisis, Covid, etc?

    If you had told me then that 40 years later adults in their 30s would be living with their parents, I would have struggled to believe it.

    When the EU accession states were given access there was a massive influx of people, but who (at the time) was prepared to put the brakes on, when it seemed the economy had never been so good? Who could have predicted how many would stay, or many would return to their home country? Who would have predicted Brexit?

    Governments are made of people not that different from the voters who elect them. They tend to be cautious, and to react slowly instead of boldly. If they try anything too ambitious or progressive the voters will easily turn on them.

    And the people themselves are not exactly blameless, as they want multiple contradictory things.

    They want to own their own house and not have the government tell them it's under-utilised, nor to pay anything more than a token amount of property tax - it's their house, their castle, they paid for it, so f*ck off. If they have managed to buy multiple houses they want to be able to rent them or leave them empty as they see fit. If the government suggests something that might cause property prices to fall, half the country is delighted and the other half is horrified.

    People don't want to pay much inheritance tax, they want their own family, and only their own family, to benefit from any accumulated wealth. Yet they complain about income tax.

    Most of the problems we are seeing are simply emergent behaviour. The root causes of those problems are the economic model and culture and neither of those are going to change in a hurry. If we want anything to be dramatically different, we will have to change how we think, and change what we value, and be prepared to make some sacrifices. And deep down, most people simply don't want to change. They want other people to change. Other people to pay more tax, or leave their houses, or whatever, to solve the problems they themselves are facing.

    Are we, as a county, prepared (for example) to pay much more property tax? To (hypothetically) have our houses or land CPO'd with fewer restrictions? To pay way more inheritance tax? To have big financial penalties for leaving a house empty? If not, then maybe we are not being realistic about what "the government" can do to improve things.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,385 ✭✭✭volchitsa


    No that is not "literally" what she said. She actually started out by acknowledging that she was not in a stable relationship with a potential father until a year ago.

    I only met someone I could even contemplate having children with in the last year.

    There are so many significant aspects of that one piece of information alone that it's clear that it's not just about housing or even about money.

    And TBH, even if she'd posted nothing more than "My partner and I have wanted a baby since we were 20, and still cannot afford one" that would still be only a personal testimony, and would not invalidate data studies that name all sorts of reasons than just "money" or housing. Because, as they say, the plural of anecdote is not data.

    Reem Alsalem UNSR Violence Against Women and Girls: "Very concerned about statements by the IOC at Paris2024 (M)ultiple international treaties and national constitutions specifically refer to women & their fundamental rights, so the world (understands) what women -and men- are. (H)ow can one assess fairness and justice if we do not know who we are being fair and just to?"



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,544 ✭✭✭✭Tony EH


    Quote…

    The financial aspects of having children are really concerning to me. I already worry about money so much. If my house had cost even 20-30% less than it did, and I didn't have to take out a home improvement loan, this wouldn't matter so much. Everything comes back to the astronomical cost of housing. Then you add creche fees and all the items kids need on top of that, and it's really worrying. I feel less well off on a day-to-day basis at 36 than I did at 26, and I think that's the case for lots of people.

    Everything comes back to the astronomical cost of housing.



  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 39,561 CMod ✭✭✭✭ancapailldorcha


    Are you suggesting that people shouldn't have the reasonable expectation of settling down where they grew up? I think you've over simplified here. You can learn a trade, sure but those often entail very hard physical labour. That's neither suitable for everyone nor viable in the long term. Second, you might learn to be an electrician but that doesn't mean you'll make it in somewhere like Romania or Hungary without connections or the language.

    The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God.

    Leviticus 19:34



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,915 ✭✭✭Greyfox


    We don't all get what we want. Many 75 year olds who rent will have to work at least part time so survive. I



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,863 ✭✭✭✭markodaly


    You, literally, have a woman telling you on this thread that affordability is foremost in her mind with regards to having a child. And her sentiments are echoed by others, including people I know.

    Yes, let's believe random anecdotes and commentry online and ignore all the independent studies done on this topic.

    Brilliant!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,544 ✭✭✭✭Tony EH


    You'll only believe what you want to believe.

    But whether you accept it or not, many people will cite cost as being the prohibiting factor on whether they have babies or not.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,385 ✭✭✭volchitsa


    LOL.

    One word that contradicts the rest of the post, as well as data from around the world, but agrees with what you want to hear.

    i could ask you to explain how the cost of housing has stopped her meeting someone until last year but what’s the point.

    Reem Alsalem UNSR Violence Against Women and Girls: "Very concerned about statements by the IOC at Paris2024 (M)ultiple international treaties and national constitutions specifically refer to women & their fundamental rights, so the world (understands) what women -and men- are. (H)ow can one assess fairness and justice if we do not know who we are being fair and just to?"



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,021 ✭✭✭✭anewme


    If people are not given their state pension till 75, you will see a lot of people opt to live their lives on social and never work, especially thise now in lower middle class, who effectively earn the same as those on welfare when everything is factored in.








  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,890 ✭✭✭CelticRambler


    Well, it's another one of those recently embraced "have it all" situations that comes at a cost. If we want to enjoy the freedom to pack our bags, jump on a plane and head off somewhere else to find our fortune, then we create the conditions needed for someone else to come in and take the place we've vacated, and can hardly complain about them if they do. If settling down where we grew up is really that important to us, then we should understand the risk of leaving, and perhaps choose not to leave.

    There's a lot of whinging across several threads here about adult children still living with their parents - but isn't that the ultimate "settling down where I grew up" scenario? And what's wrong with it? There are numerous advantages to both the parents and the child/ren in such an arrangement, especially if money that would otherwise have been spent on rent or mortgage interest can be invested in extending and improving the family home. That's how most of our societies worked in the past, and it led (generally) to strong local communities. Those who found the tradition too oppressive got up and left, often never to return, but frequently made a great new life for themselves somewhere else.

    Somewhat along the same lines, though, there's no hard-and-fast rule that any community can/must/will survive in a particular area for more than a few generations. Traipsing around the backwaters of Europe, I've come across dozens of ghost towns where the information board features a phrase along the lines of "… was once a flourishing centre for …" And then circumstances changed - sometimes short-sighted and self-inflicted, sometimes bigger picture stuff - and everyone left for a better future in some other place. That's what humans do.

    So no, I don't think the unconditional expectation of settling down where one grew up is reasonable: it's something else that has to be traded off against professional, financial, emotional and other aspirations.



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