Unions NSW
Home  |  Contact  |  Feedback  |  Sitemap
Search

About Us
*About Unions NSW
*About Unions
*Who's Who

Information Centre
*Catalogue
*Labour Review
*Ask Neale
*Book a cottage @ Currawong Beach
*Labor Links

What's Going On?
*Events
*Circulars
*Todays Meetings
*Minutes

Annual Reports
*Latest Reports
*Past Reports


Unionsafe

LaborNET

ACTU
printer-friendly version
Social issues Labour Review, issue no. 172

Economic Boom’s New Generation Poor

By Stuart Braun

As Australia gets richer, younger generations are failing to scale the ladder of opportunity.

A decade of economic growth has been good to many Australians. The property market has boomed. Wages have risen. Share markets continue to ride record highs. Ordinary Australians have grown rich. But others have missed out.

In 2004, Paul Keating described a worrying trend in Australia, the emergence of what he termed the "new poor". ... [They're] a group who get along in the world without institutional loyalties,...• he said, ...without lifetime employment, who have to pay for education, who live life in nodules of employment, who are locked out of property, who are slated to rent often sub-standard accommodation, who are wary of marriage and financial obligation, who watched the wealthy get wealthier and ... rely more or less on the camaraderie of mutual friends in similar circumstances....•

Two years on, the problem is deepening. A raft of statistics and reports indicate that home-ownership and job security, the twin pillars of the Australian dream, are no longer a reality for many 20 and 30-somethings. Amid a doubling and tripling of property prices, and the enculturation of casual, contract employment, an increasing segment of Generations X and Y have failed to share the gains of their asset-rich parents. They will likely never make up the lost ground.

Much has been made of the rise in "grinding" poverty in Australia--an 18-month senate inquiry released in March concluded that over two million Australians are living on the poverty line. But another kind of poverty is eating at the foundation of Australia's once impregnable middle class.

Eureka Street vol. 16, no 15 17th October 2006.


  • Visit Eureka Street

  • Contact Details

    Name : Neale Towart
    Position : Librarian
    Telephone : 02 9264 1691
    Facsimile : 02 9261 3505
    Email : n.towart@unionsnsw.org.au

    view all articles in current issue | view all issues | view latest issue


    Home   |   Contact   |   Feedback   |   Sitemap   |   Privacy Statement

    © Unions NSW 2001.
    Unions NSW
    Level 3, 4-10 Goulburn St,
    Sydney NSW 2000
    Ph: (02) 9881 5999 Fax: (02) 9261 3505

    URL: http://council.labor.net.au/labor_review/172/update1722.html
    Last Modified: Wednesday, 08-Nov-2006 16:11:15 EST

    Unions NSW is proudly created, designed and programmed by
    Social Change Online for Unions NSW

    Social Change Online Workers Online Unions NSW
    LaborNET