One of the protests
made at the meeting, by as I recall a banker, was that the county is not a for-profit
corporation, but an organization of the many to improve the lives of all, sometimes
by the care for the needs of the few. It
was an eloquent statement of the larger issue.
As I’ve mentioned before, the nation is entering a silent crisis period when
the baby-boomer generation is starting to grow old and retire without adequate
financial resources. The corporate
pension structure has been so altered over the last 30 years, from
fixed-benefit arrangements to IRA plus Social Security, that large numbers of
those now approaching retirement age will find themselves at or near the
poverty level. Studies show that average IRA levels plus Social Security are
far from enough to guarantee a comfortable retirement. The average retirement
account of those approaching retirement is about $100,000, producing a
sustainable income of about $5000 per year. We may see a return to the times before 1950
when the majority of those over 65 lived in poverty. In the face of this, corporations are using
the recession and the advent of more efficient computer and robotics technology
to “down size” older employees. There is
a silent “downsizing” of an entire generation going on, as older employees are
let go in favor of younger, less expensive workers and are finding new jobs
impossible to obtain. Retirement is often
not by choice, and not at a time of the employee’s choosing. To the corporation, the problems, health and
otherwise, of retired employees are externalities to be ignored or minimized. If government treats them the same way, they
fall between the cracks.
Allowing large portions
of the largest generation in the country’s history, all of them, by the way,
voters, to fall between the cracks is bound to produce social turmoil. But beyond that, it is a failure of social
conscience and of thoughtful planning for the future. The passionate defense last night by rich and
poor alike of the nursing facility exemplified America’s social conscience at
its best. It is now up to government to
live up to the ethical standard of its citizenry. That responsibility extends from the county
to the halls of Congress. Purely from a planning viewpoint, this country’s
economy has run for the past 40 years on the consumption preferences of the
baby boomer generation. To convert that
driving force almost overnight into a minimally consuming drag on the economy is
foolish. It amounts to choosing a
continuing recession. Both corporations
and government share responsibility in this.
But it is government that explicitly is tasked “to promote the general
welfare”, and it is government that must look beyond immediate cost cutting to
the needs of the future. The impacts of the crisis will be felt across the
nation and in the county. At all levels,
non-ideological planning is needed, not ideological grandstanding.
A non-ideological case
can be made for handling the health needs of the elderly poor by other than
direct governmental management, just as non-ideological counter-arguments exist. But there is no excuse for lack of thoughtful
consideration of the growing needs of the poor, and how best to provide
them. Letting them “fall between the
cracks” is a disastrous solution, both for them and for the country. Whatever your ideology, they are a social
issue which must be addressed. The failure
of local government last night was not just a failure of conscience – trying to
operate without a heart – it was a failure of responsible planning. It is
the failure of politicians who truly have no regard for the future of the
country, only for their own. At the
local and national level, it is time for such politicians to be “downsized.”
1 comment:
Joe, your blog was absolutely right on the mark. The masquerade and fake public hearing you and I saw on Tuesday evening at FCC is symptomatic of the "heart problem" we have politicians today. It is the tragedy of society and its so-called governmental and duly elected leaders who grab power, push their own agenda and only give lip service to a so called "public hearing" - they heard a lot, but like the Pharaoh of Egypt their hearts were hard - in fact they had no heart at all.
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