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posted by martyb on Monday May 27 2019, @06:52PM   Printer-friendly
from the it's-all-the-millennials'-fault dept.

The World Socialist Web Site, publication of record of the ICFI (SEP), on May 24th released a report about the grim situation many millennials face:

The stock market is booming, and President Donald Trump is boasting at every turn that the unemployment rate is lower than it has been in five decades.

However, the working class, the vast majority of the population, is confronting an unprecedented social, economic, health and psychological crisis. The same processes that have produced vast sums of wealth for the ruling elite have left millions of workers on the brink of existence.

Perhaps no segment of the population reflects the devastating consequences of these processes so starkly as the generation of young people deemed the "millennials," those born roughly between the years 1981 and 1996. More than half the 72 million American millennials are now in their 30s, with the oldest turning 38 this year.

A recent exposé by the Wall Street Journal noted that millennials are "in worse financial shape than prior living generations and may not recover." The article, "Millennials Near Middle Age in Crisis," [paywalled] concludes by stating that people born in the 1980s are at risk of becoming "America's Lost generation."

Selected bullet points from the WSWS article:

  • Millennials have taken on 300 percent more student debt than their parents' generation. [Source: The College Board, Trends in Student Aid 2013]
  • By 2014, 48 percent of workers with bachelor's degrees are employed in jobs for which they're overqualified. [Source: Labor Economist Stephen Rose, published by Urban Institute.]
  • The number of workers in the United States participating in the gig economy is expected to triple to 42 million workers by 2020, and 42 percent of those people are likely to be millennials. [Source: Freshbooks]
  • Between 1978 and 2017, according to the EPI, CEO compensation rose in the US by 1,070 percent, while the typical worker's compensation over these 39 years rose by a mere 11.2 percent.
  • In the 40 years leading up to the recession, rents increased at more than twice the rate of incomes. [Source: Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University.]
  • One in 5 millennials say they cannot afford routine healthcare expenses. Many of these millennials are uninsured because of the cost. An additional 26 percent say they can afford routine health-care costs, but only with difficulty. [Source: Harris Poll]
  • Men and women in their thirties are marrying at rates below every other generation on record. [Source: The Atlantic, "The Death (and Life) of Marriage in America"]
  • It is predicted that most millennials will not be able to retire until age 75. [Source: NerdWallet analysis of federal data]

The report concludes, "Far from becoming the 'Lost Generation' predicted by the Wall Street Journal, this generation of workers carries within it an enormous source of revolutionary potential."

[Ed. Note. I debated whether or not to run this story given the partisan source for the article, but the list of references suggested it was more than a simple opinion piece. So, are things really as grim as portrayed here? I'm too old to be a millennial, but have both personally experienced as well as witnessed many others facing the same trends listed here. Where do things go from here?]


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday May 28 2019, @06:01AM (6 children)

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday May 28 2019, @06:01AM (#848422) Journal

    What they pay their C**s isn't really relevant. The job duties and rarity of skillsets aren't remotely comparable.

    So, maybe you can explain what those job duties and skillsets are?

    Historically, top CEO's earned about 40x what his workers earned. That seems a lot, but it's about what almost everyone agreed that the top jobs were actually worth.

    What, exactly, do today's CEO's offer, that is worth 100x to 10,000x what their fathers and grandfathers earned?

    Sorry Buzzard, but few of those top tier executives are worth even a fraction of what they are paid. They are most certainly not worthy of those golden parachutes that guarantee that they will be rewarded with half a billion dollars, even after they drive their company into the ground.

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  • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Tuesday May 28 2019, @10:06AM (5 children)

    So, maybe you can explain what those job duties and skillsets are?

    Okay, I will. They make the important decisions that decide the future of a business. They look around, say this is important, that's a fucking stupid idea, and people are going to pay through the nose for this if we make it. If that doesn't sound hard to you then let me ask you: why aren't you doing it and pulling in seven figures a year when you do a mediocre job? The answer to that one has nothing to do with who you know.

    When you don't even know why they can command the compensation they do, you really have no business having an opinion on the matter, man.

    --
    My rights don't end where your fear begins.
    • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday May 28 2019, @11:08AM

      by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday May 28 2019, @11:08AM (#848458) Journal

      The answer to that one has nothing to do with who you know.

      Really? So, what's this whole "networking" thing we hear continuously from college grads? Sorry, that is an outright falsehood. In fact, I'll go further - it has everything to do with who you know, as well as who you blow.

      I hate to disillusion you, TMB, but the world does not exactly work strictly as a meritocracy. That doesn't work out in the corporate world, or in politics, in the military, or even in academia.

      Let me rephrase the original question: If your grandfather could make the company profitable (in many cases, amazingly profitable) on a salary of hundreds of thousands, why do you need hundreds of millions today? And, at the same time, grandfather paid his employees a sizeable fraction of his own salary, why can we not do the same today?

      As for why I'm not sitting behind one of those desks, making millions, maybe it's because I have a soul (despite what some of our SJW's might say).

    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday May 28 2019, @04:03PM (2 children)

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday May 28 2019, @04:03PM (#848533) Journal

      The answer to that one has nothing to do with who you know.

      We need to recall that some of this is due to status signaling and Other Peoples' Money (OPM) too. For example, if a large pension fund wants to show that they care about running the businesses they invest their clients' money in, they can point to the pay they gave to the CEO. It shows they care.

      And of course, being OPM, it's no skin off their teeth if the CEO turns out be useless.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 28 2019, @07:46PM (1 child)

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 28 2019, @07:46PM (#848639)

        For example, if a large pension fund wants to show that they care about running the businesses they invest their clients' money in, they can point to the pay they gave to the CEO. It shows they care.

        I could be wrong about this but I was under the impression that pension funds were fiduciarily separated from the businesses that they serve. Go ahead and educate me if I'm wrong.

        • (Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday May 29 2019, @01:24PM

          by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday May 29 2019, @01:24PM (#848889) Journal

          I could be wrong about this but I was under the impression that pension funds were fiduciarily separated from the businesses that they serve.

          Pension funds don't just sit on money. They invest it. When they do so with most stock shares, they get a vote (often a very large one) on the leadership and policies of that company. Those businesses are what I was referring to.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 28 2019, @07:40PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 28 2019, @07:40PM (#848637)

      They make the important decisions that decide the future of a business.

      Frankly, it looks to me like your average Fortune 500 CEO isn't any better at spotting future trends then a small gaggle of teenagers. So, again, why do you think CEOs are worth their over-sized compensation packages?

      If that doesn't sound hard to you then let me ask you: why aren't you doing it and pulling in seven figures a year when you do a mediocre job?

      Mostly because the vast majority of us don't have the resources of a Fortune 500 company at our disposal. You were saying?