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Jack Smith's avatar

It’s interesting, I think the fundamental problem of Thatcherism came via the message itself. Because it was telling people that accruing unearned wealth, via housing windfalls or otherwise, was a result of thrift and hard work, once they did it they became entitled because they had internalised those beliefs.

This is, I think, a central point which underlines Ben Ansell’s recent (excellent) work about wealth taxes. It also comes up when you talk about pensions, where people think they paid into some pension pot and they’re just taking out what they put in when that’s not how the state system works.

People of my generation (millennials) don’t believe this because they view the system as a sham. There is no amount of thrift and hard work that can help you buy a house when prices are rising much faster than your earnings are. Even people who have recently bought realise this because their own experience is likely one of getting where they got to despite the system, not because of it (E.g. parental help or a tax break).

My generation also experienced the backwash of ideologies like Thatcherism, which has been all this garbage about self-improvement or manifesting. But that turns out to be a sham too. Changing your sleep schedule or simply taking a positive attitude won’t stop your rent from increasing, help you pay your bills, or get you a big pay rise. Even when you do everything ‘right’, nothing works and then what you hear from politicians and many older people is that it’s somehow your fault.

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Elaine Simpson's avatar

Excellent article Sam. Well thought through analysis. As a Boomer who over time has benefited massively from Thatcher’s reforms - whilst hating the further inequalities that emerged, I mix with many people in my age group who feel as strongly as Millennials about this. We think the younger generation have been robbed to our advantage. I don’t think the Conservatives have a lot to lose if they seriously act on your advice because so many of us are deeply entrenched in our political views at our age. There are many I talk to who would only ever vote conservative whatever happens and still, after all the scandals of the last years and the Brexit disaster continue to insist ‘they’re still better than the other lot’ or ‘all politicians are the same’. Whilst others, a much smaller group in my experience, would never vote conservative anyway. I would be interested to know how many genuine floating voters there are amongst the over 65s. Not many I suspect. So a shift in policy may cause less damage than expected.

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