
People may be living longer throughout Europe but that is creating “massive unfairness.”
That is one of the keynote messages to emerge from a major new book on ageing, launched in Brussels on Tuesday (10 June).
According to its author ageing is beginning to “destroy social structures and threaten our political stability.”
It also, says Giles Merritt, raises “uncomfortable questions” about social justice and the “looming bankruptcy of pension funds” in the years ahead.
In Timebomb: When Ageing Explodes, Merritt sounds an important warning that, unless Europe defuses “ageing’s explosive force”, within two decades its societies will be “devastated by it.”
He asserts that:
- Millennials and Gen-Zers are condemned to pay much higher taxes to fund pensions and healthcare for older people, but will receive far less when they retire.
- The longstanding ratio of four taxpayers supporting each pensioner has shrunk to less than 3:1, and by mid-century will be an “unsustainable” 1.7:1.
- Average European family size has reduced to 1.5 children per couple, so fewer young people entering the taxable workforce: by 2060 it will have shrunk by a quarter.
- There will be 60 million more pensioners in Europe by 2050 which means older people can easily outvote younger taxpayers.
- Europe’s under-35s own less than 5% of all net wealth, whereas ‘Baby Boomers’ at the same age had 20%.
- Up to two-thirds of ‘Generation Rent’s income can be swallowed by housing costs. Mortgages are often unattainable, costing up to 15 times earnings, up from four times in 1980.
- Europeans’ healthcare costs will have doubled by mid-century, averagely taking up more than a quarter of governments’ budgets.
- Squeezed tax revenues along with increased public spending are a recipe for serious trouble ahead and a review of taxes on property, companies and financial transactions is needed, to put an end to cross-border loopholes for tax dodgers.
Merritt says, “Europeans haven’t embraced new technologies as effectively as Asians and Americans, and have shown a navelgazing preoccupation with intra-European questions.”
They have “neglected” the reforms needed to streamline Europe’s industrial base and to confront the consequences of ageing, he argues.
“These have been confusing years for Europe. In 1980 it accounted for almost a third of the global economy, but now just 15 per cent. On the other hand, Europe was mostly a geographical description then; the EU numbered nine countries, whereas today it has three times as many, its own currency and an embryo political structure. The bloc is potentially a super-power,” he states.
“Europeans’ ability to overcome centuries of cultural separation and armed conflict is essential to their future prosperity, but the ageing of its population risks wrecking the drive for closer integration.”
Ageing, he believes, is a “largely invisible problem.”
“To use a nautical metaphor,”
he adds,
“Europe’s ship of state may appear to be sailing serenely onwards, but it is holed below the waterline by its demography.”
Britain is no less vulnerable for having left the EU, and “perhaps more so,” says Merritt.
This book presents a Europe-wide picture of the problems that ageing is creating, and
Comments
7 responses to “Europe’s Ageing Population Poses Stability Risks for a Neglectful Continent”
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Seems like we’ve traded the fountain of youth for a retirement home in the heart of Europe. Cheers to the brave millennials who’ll be footing the bill while the older generation enjoys their leisurely bingo nights! 🍷😏
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European life expectancy is soaring, but who knew that meant our social structures would be as stable as a Jenga tower? 🍷 Just wait till the geezers start outvoting the rest of us – might as well hand them the keys to the kingdom! 😅
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Seems like Europe’s just discovered that living longer doesn’t mean living better—who knew? 🤷♂️ Next thing you know, we’ll be voting from our rocking chairs, while the youngsters are stuck paying for it all. Cheers to a future of “massive unfairness”! 🍷💸
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What a delightful predicament we find ourselves in—living longer and yet somehow ensuring the next generation gets the short end of the stick! 🌍💸 Looks like Europe’s about to find out that the fountain of youth doesn’t come with a financial plan. 🥴
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Looks like Europe is set to be the world’s finest retirement home, where the only thing growing faster than the population is the number of gray hairs. 😂 Good luck to the millennials paying for the bingo nights and healthcare of their grandparents while they try to find a flatmate for their shoebox-sized apartments! 🏡
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Isn’t it charming how Europe is aging like fine cheese, only to find itself smelling worse and costing a fortune? 😂 Meanwhile, the youngsters are busy figuring out how to pay for a retirement party no one invited them to!
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Looks like Europe’s got a real gem on its hands with the pensioner population explosion! Who knew living longer would come with a side of fiscal chaos and social unrest? 😂💸
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