cytg111
Lifer
- Mar 17, 2008
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Do you honestly think the majority of South America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle-East will ever get to that point?
Yes?
Do you honestly think the majority of South America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle-East will ever get to that point?
From your 10m. You pulled that as an example, yes? I was following through on that idea.
We have met our obligations by covering our debts through growth. For example, and using real numbers, the United States has picked up an additional 100 million people in my life time. If current immigration trends continue, we'll easily pick up another 100 million people before I am a senior. I personally think that is devastating to our environment AND I believe we can achieve robust economic models that do not demand such growth from us.
Do you honestly think the majority of South America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle-East will ever get to that point?
Not content. I think we could reach a point where resources are not a constraint. I think that is very far off. Closer is basic items such as food, water, shelter, education will get to a price that is effectively 0.
The topic isn't 'the welfare state' so much as specifically, pensions, surely?
If people stop having many children and the proportion of pensioners to those of working-age increases, that is going to cause stresses.
But that applies even if you don't have a welfare state at all. Pensions that are 'paid for' in free-market terms still require young people to do the actual work. Pensions do not consist of vast stockpiles of tins of baked-beans that the elderly can then live off. Doesn't matter if you've put money aside, if in the future there are too few young people to actually make use of that stored capital to produce the things you need you are going to have a problem.
Another issue is to ask _why_ people aren't having children. The cost of housing and childcare has to be part of that. (Though maybe it's just that children are intrinsically annoying, of course, though that would suggest that evolution has gone wrong somewhere.)
Plus there's an argument to just delay pensionable age, and oblige people to work for longer (which the UK certainly is doing). If work was less unpleasant and if people could reach that age in better health that would be easier. A problem there is that how healthy older people are is very dependent on their social class.
Funny thing, the youth complaining about having to pay old peoples' pensions today will be the retired old people complaining about the lazy youth tomorrow.
That wound is the problem of not enough people saving enough money for their retirement. And as the youth are by far the worst culprits of that, they are the problem not the fix.Maybe they would rather just not be in that position and would rather fix the problem instead of putting a incy-wincy bandaid on the GUSHING GINORMOUS wound.
Or we can just keep raising pension age, which we do.
Kinda hard to justify when the average age is starting to actually going in reverse...
Not here AFAIK, and if it is then we don't have a problem.Kinda hard to justify when the average age is starting to actually going in reverse...