The Nation: Clash of the Generations debate
On The Nation:
Michelle Boag,
Tau Henare and Simon Chapple debate Geoff Simmons, Asher
Emanuel and Julie Anne Genter, moderated by Lisa
Owen
Lisa Owen: As we’ve just heard,
Shamubeel Eaqub's new book says it’s the baby-boomer
generation reaping the rewards of the housing market,
locking out those that follow. But have the boomers really
pulled up the ladder behind them, or are generations X and Y
just unwilling to make the sacrifices needed to get their
feet on the rungs? We thought we’d put the generations
head to head in a debate, so on this side we have the
generations X and Y. If they can put their iPhones away from
a few minutes. They are Morgan Foundation economist Geoff
Simmons, Green MP Julie Anne Genter and former Salient
editor Asher Emanuel. And they were once hippies but are now
most definitely the man – for the boomers, we have the
Otago University economist Simon Chapple, former National
Party president and communications consultant Michelle Boag
and former National MP Tau Henare. So let’s start with the
boomers. Michelle, has your generation snatched up all the
golden years and cut the next generation
loose?
Michelle Boag: I wish. I don’t
think that’s a very fair assumption, and I think some of
those assumptions that Shamubeel Eaqub made, and of course
he very much represents the generation that you’ve got
facing us here today, actually need to be challenged,
because most of the boomers I know who have got children are
helping them to get into their homes, because if they do
have equity in their own homes, they can use that. I mean,
one of the banks, Westpac, even put in place a scheme to
deliberately encourage parents to do that, to actually
use—
But isn’t that the privilege you
have, the fact that you own a home, that you’re able to
offer equity or help?
Boag: That’s where
assumptions need to be challenged, because I don’t own my
own home. I am actually a renter now. I’ve made a— My
husband and I have made a financial decision that where we
live is a lease-hold property and therefore it makes more
sense to do other things with our money than invest in
lease-hold, which has very limited capital gain. So I’m
actually generation rent, and, in fact, there are a lot of
people I know who also are renting because they’ve chosen
to invest in a retirement property or a beach property; they
rent a place in town.
Okay, so, Geoff, the
boomers are doing it hard as well, so why are you and those
younger than you doing it tough, do you
think?
Geoff Simmons: Well, we don’t mind
the boomers getting rich as long as they actually paid tax
on their biggest investments, which has been housing. They
haven’t made— you know, they haven’t contributed for
the huge gains that they have made. The younger generation,
as Michelle’s pointed out, are getting helped by their
parents. That’s fine, but what if you don’t have the
parents that can help you? What if you don’t have the
parents that can provide you a stepladder to get up to the
bottom rung?
What if you don’t,
Tau?
Tau Henare: I find that a bit on the
nose. You know, during the ‘80s, it was our generation
that faced wholesale redundancies. My old man and his family
were railway people, and their whole generation before our
eyes – before our eyes when we were growing up – lost
their jobs. It was our generation that established kura
kaupapa, that made an attempt to make things better for our
kids. I would love to be able to go to a kura now. I would
love to be young. So what that you can’t afford a house or
go and buy a home for yourselves. Actually, we had to
struggle with 24% interest rates. You know, I
mean—
How much interest did you pay on your
first house, Tau? Do you know?
Henare: Oh,
look, when we got our first mortgage back in the mid-‘80s,
we were paying 17%, 19% interest rates, and that was on a
mortgage that was from Housing New
Zealand.
Julie Anne, interest rates are only
5% to 6% now.
Julie Anne Genter: That’s
true, and that’s one of the reasons why house prices are
out of control. So house prices were a lot lower. Even when
they were paying higher interest rates on it, they needed
less for a deposit and needed less to pay it off in the long
term. And I agree with what Tau said – you know, there
have been some advances made, but the reality is that
successive governments have tilted the playing field more
and more and eroded opportunities for younger generations,
and that started in the ‘80s. But now we’ve gotten to
the point where younger generations simply don’t have the
same opportunities. You’ve got to get a loan if you want a
tertiary education, there aren’t as many job opportunities
when you get out of university, you’re saddled with
student debt, and then you’ve got to somehow save up for a
down payment on a house, and house prices, particularly in
Auckland, are completely out of control. That’s a failure
of government policy.
Boag: But you don’t have to get a
loan if you want to go to university. You did what we did
and what, in fact, one of your own panel did – you worked
while you went to university. There was no expectation that
the state owed you a tertiary education—
Genter:
Tertiary education was free.
Henare: Tau hasn’t got a
tertiary education.
Simmons: It was free. My parents got
paid to go to university.
Henare: Well, we— Hey, which
generation—?
Boag: I didn’t get paid to go to
university.
Henare: Which generation that you can pick
out of the last hundred years was given a loan without
paying any interest?
Boag: Exactly.
Henare: None,
except you guys.
Asher, how much is your
student loan? Because you’ve got a student loan, haven’t
you?
Asher Emanuel: My student loan is over
$50,000…
And how did
you—?
Emanuel: …and I worked part-time
throughout my tertiary studies. I wasn’t able
to—
Henare: What interest rates do you pay on your
student loan?
Emanuel: I have an interest-free student
loan.
Henare: Oh, wow, there you go.
Emanuel: That’s
not really the question. I mean, we’re asking about the
distribution of these resources between generations. Now,
most of the people with whom I graduate will leave
university with approaching $20,000 worth of debt. That’s
going to take them at least— on average seven years to pay
off if they’re more, more if they’re female. And
you’re here saying that we should be able to start saving
for a house deposit as soon as we’re leaving university to
start looking after the families that we might want to have.
That’s just not an option the way that the housing market
is.
Henare: You need to suck it up,
because—
Is that a fair point, Simon? You
know, Asher says he’s disadvantaged because he had to pay
for his education.
Simon Chapple: It’s a
fair point but a very narrow one. The current generation of
New Zealanders are richer than the previous generation.
They’re in better health than the previous generation.
When my generation went through university, and I was one of
the very lucky ones to do so, it was about 5% or 6% of us.
Now it’s pushing up in the high 20s, 30% of
people.
Genter: We—
Chapple: Can I finish, please?
They’re taller than us because they’ve been in better
health. They’re 2cm on average, and we can see that, and
they’re better-looking.
Boag: Speak for
yourself.
Chapple: We need to create a whole picture,
rather than focus on a particular disadvantage. Yes, there
are major problems for young people in the housing market. I
acknowledge that. However, they’ve got an asset which very
many baby boomers didn’t get the opportunity to get, and
that’s a university education.
Does
it—?
Simmons: You can’t say that this
isn’t a generational issue, Simon, because we’ve got
some of the lowest rates of elderly poverty in the developed
world; we’ve got among the highest rates of child poverty
in the developed world. This is a generational
issue.
Boag: So you’re saying that we should have
higher rates of elderly poverty? I mean, I would have
thought that’s a success of a society is how you look
after the vulnerable, right?
Simmons: Hang on. If you
want a successful society, where do you think you should put
your money – in the elderly or the young? Which is the
investment?
Boag: Well, the elderly have actually paid
taxes for 60 years and entitled to have some sort of
return.
Genter: But nobody’s arguing that they
shouldn’t have— we shouldn’t look after the elderly,
but I just have to say you’ve said that there have been
assumptions made. When you look at the numbers, child
poverty doubled since the 1980s and homeownership amongst
people in their late 30s has declined by 20% just in the
last decade. So when you look at—
Boag: I love the way
the left talks about child poverty doubling. The trouble is
the measures have changed, and what happens is they measure
child poverty as a percentage of income. So when income goes
up, the threshold goes up.
Simmons: You can argue
measures, Michelle, but the fact remains that it has gone
up, no matter which measures you look
at.
Let’s bring Simon in
here.
Henare: Have some
children.
Simon, because you actually think
that there are inequalities within the generations, don’t
you?
Chapple: Two points. First of all, most
inequality in our society happens within generations, not
between generations. Geoff’s got a fair point, I think, on
the issue of child poverty, but that’s not an issue of
tertiary education. Most of the kids who grow up poor today
in New Zealand will have no opportunity to have tertiary
education. If we’re concerned about child poverty, let’s
discuss that, not—
But these days you
apparently need a degree to be a receptionist. It’s
difficult to get jobs.
Henare: Oh, that’s
rubbish. I mean, look, how many kids have you guys got
collectively?
Simmons: None.
Genter: None.
Emanuel:
None.
Henare: Far out.
Boag: There you go.
Genter:
Well, we can’t. One, we can’t afford it, and
two—
Henare: Rubbish.
Boag: Oh!
Henare: See, I
have never met anybody who partners up with their partner
and says, lying in their bed on their honey, ‘Can we
afford to do this?’ Actually, no—
Simmons: Well, in
your generation, they didn’t have to, Tau, but in our
generation we have to.
Henare: Rubbish. Go and have some
kids and actually figure out how actually hard and difficult
it is to bring up children.
But can they
afford to have kids?
Henare: Oh,
rubbish.
Can they afford to have kids, this
generation?
Boag: Come on. Our parents, if
you used the child poverty measures that are used today, our
parents would have been regarded as poor, but the trouble is
they were quite happy to go and build a garage and live in
it for three years before they could accumulate enough money
to buy a house, and that’s what many of them
did.
We’ll talk about that after the break
– whether people should be living in garages while they
save money. You’re back with The Nation and today’s
debate – whether baby boomers are going head to head with
Generation X and Y. And before the break, Michelle Boag said
her generation, Julie Anne, well, they stayed in garages and
shacks and saved money for their first house. So is that
your problem? You’re not prepared – X and Y – not
prepared to make sacrifices, need to harden
up.
Genter: I think our generations are
definitely prepared to make sacrifices, but the reality is
there aren’t the housing opportunities there that need to
be there. And that’s the problem in Auckland. And
interestingly, part of this is as a result of the boomers.
So in Auckland, for example, where land values are highest
in the isthmus, young people want to be close to public
transport, able to walk and cycle, access to jobs and
opportunities and education, and we can’t actually
increase the supply of homes where people want to be,
because the boomers have got it all locked up in regulation
and the Unitary Plan. They won’t allow us to build
multi-unit dwellings.
Henare: But there is a question
here, and there’s a whole lot of snobbery around this
debate at the moment. So many young people wanna live in
Grey Lynn and Ponsonby and close to the city. When
actually—
Genter: Why shouldn’t they be given the
opportunity to do that?
Henare: When my old man was
looking for a house, they actually went out and lived in
Otara. How many of the young generation that are looking for
a house are willing to move out to South Auckland, out to
Papakura, out to Manurewa, where the house—
Simmons:
Tau, they’re buying in Pokeno, for crying out loud!
They’re buying in Pokeno.
Henare: Good on
them.
Simmons: The government wants to pave over the
Bombay Hills to provide housing, and that just pushes the
cost on to transport.
Asher, do you expect to
own a house, Asher?
Emanuel: No, I don’t
think that I will. As you heard in the interview before,
when 2020 rolls around, which is about the time me, a
23-year-old, might be considering looking at buying a home,
it would consume 80% of the income of an average young
couple. It’s just untenable. Home ownership is no longer,
I think, a reasonable aspiration for my generation. Now, for
better or worse, that’s one question. But what are we
going to do about it instead is another question. And I
think that needs to be a part of the conversation about how
these generations are treating one another. We have a
generation of landlords, and we have a generation of
renters. Now, Michelle says that she’s Generation Rent.
She says that because her and her husband were able to make
the decision that it was better for them to rent. Now, I’m
not going to have the luxury of that
decision.
Okay, let’s talk about lifestyle.
Team Boomers, the pub used to close at 6 o’clock so that
people could have an hour of drinking after they finish up
at 5. Who finishes at 5 these days?
Boag:
Nobody.
These guys are on their phones and
iPads are expected to work much longer
hours.
Boag: And we all are. We all are. We
all work, you know, all sorts of hours. But the issue here
is that expectations have changed so much. The expectations
that— for everyone. Right? The expectation my parents had
is they would live in a modest little batch before they
could afford to buy their own home or build it. The
expectations when I was growing up, like Simon, I was the
only one in my family to go to university – and I’m
talking extended family here – and I didn’t go until I
was 22 and I could afford to support myself and work
full-time while I went to university.
Good
point. Julie Anne, are there more choices now for
women?
Genter: Sort of. I mean, there’s
still a major gender pay gap, right, and that’s still a
problem. It’s not totally equal as it should be. But I
just want to come back to this failure of government policy,
because the fact is government policy has changed. We have
governments who are governing in the interests of those who
are voting for them; they’re not thinking about the
long-term; they’re not investing for the future of New
Zealand. And so what we have is policy, whether it’s at
local government level or central government level that are
systematically stacking the playing field and making it
harder for younger generations.
Hang on a
second. Why would someone go to bat – in government –
go to bat for X and Y? Don’t you have yourselves to blame
because you don’t get out and you don’t vote. I think
87% of people aged over 60 did vote. There was such poor
turnout in your generation.
Simmons: Voting
is linked to house ownership rates. I mean, there’s a
direct correlation between—
Boag: What?!
Simmons:
There is. You’re more likely to vote and more likely to
be invested in your community if you own a home.
Henare:
Lazy. Lazy.
Simmons: We can’t afford a home. I mean, I
am 37.
Boag: Well, then you should get out and vote and
do something about it!
Henare: That’s
right.
Simmons: I just managed to buy an 80m2
“mansion” in Wellington. People can’t afford to get
invested in society, so they feel less invested in
society.
Boag: I want to know when it was that people
decided that buying their own home was some sort of basic
human right. Cos I tell you what, my parents’ generation
and my generation, we worked really, really hard to do
that.
Simmons: This is the get-rich scheme of the baby
boomers! The whole get-rich scheme of baby boomers is
housing.
Henare: Yeah, whatever. Who wiped your backside
when you were young? Your mom and dad.
Simmons: The only
way to get rich off housing is to saddle the next generation
with debt. It’s a known economic plan.
I
just want to bring in Simon here, because you would say that
young people today are better off than ever in terms of
their rights, their time with their parents, their equality
of life, wouldn't you?
Chapple: I would
say that. And I would also say that a lot of the discussion
about housing neglects the fact that millennials, children
of baby boomers, who's going to inherit the wealth? I look
at my generation. I mean, both of my parents died recently,
and in the case of my father, there were seven kids to
divide an estate amongst. When my children, who are
millennials, pass away, there'll be two.
Genter: It's
not going to be equally distributed.
Chapple: That's the
fundamental point. That's the point; is the inequality
within generations, some baby boomers have good assets; some
live in Greymouth.
Genter: The issue is that in previous
decades, there was more equality of opportunity. For the
boomers, there was more equality of opportunity, and—
Boag: How can you possibly say that?
Genter: Because
this government policy has changed, Michelle.
Boag: How
can you say that when tertiary education rates— You cannot
say there was less opportunity today when tertiary education
is much more prevalent.
Genter: The numbers show there's
less social mobility than there used to be.
Henare: The
funny thing is that every generation that comes along, the
new generation blames the last one. We blamed our parents
for whatever was happening. I blamed my parents for being
caned at school by some of the teachers that actually, in
their later life, said they never got into corporal
punishment. It's all the same. I mean—
Simmons: If you
guys are so tough; if you had to walk five miles to school
every day, then why can't you guys work a bit longer?
Because you're living longer — why don't you work longer?
Right. Well, that's a good time— Okay,
guys. That is a good time to talk about Super. Asher, you
are probably going to live the longest of all of us here. So
you're going to end up paying for a lot of people in their
superannuation and health. How do you feel about that?
Emanuel: Well, these guys had the good
jobs; they came for the houses; and now they're coming for
superannuation which is simply going to be unaffordable.
It's going to increase from 4% to closing in on 8% of GDP.
It's already about a quarter of Crown expenditure, and they
expect to be able to retire at 65. Now, 65 was picked at the
age of universal Super in 1938. Tau is old, but he's in good
condition compared with a lot of people who are at a similar
age in that generation. As Geoff has said, if they're as
tough as they say they are; if they have this experience of
hard work and graft that they is the reason why their
generation is so much more enormously wealthy than our
generation is going to be, then they should expect to retire
a bit later. Asher makes a good point. You're in good nick
— keep working.
Henare: I'm in good nick? I had a
heart attack at 49; what the hell are you talking about?
Boag: But we are working.
So you don't
need super at 65.
Henare: Listen, I'm
actually a believer of means testing the superannuation. So
I'm actually a wee bit out of my league here.
Apparently with Andrew Little.
Henare: Oh, look. I'd vote for Andrew
Little if he brought it in.
Boag: We are working longer.
I'm going to work until I'm 80 if I can.
But
should you still get Super? On the boomers team, should you
get Super at 65 regardless?
Chapple: I'm
with Geoff on this. I think we need to raise the age of
eligibility. The Danes have a nice system where they think
it's life expectancy, and that seems sensible.
What about you, Michelle? 65?
Boag: I would be quite happy not to get my
Super at the age of 65 because I intend to be working
anyway. And I'm quite happy for people who maybe have done
very physical jobs who can't continue to work in those jobs
after 65 for them to be supported by the state. But I'm not
going to sit back and say, 'Woe is me, the state owes me a
living.' I'm not going to stand back and say, 'Woe is me,
the state owes me an education,' or 'the state owes me a
house,' because the ethics and the values that I was brought
up with was you go and work for those things.
Genter:
Can I just say we're not blaming you, Michelle, okay? We're
just saying that if we want New Zealand to prosper in the
long-term, we have to look after those who are most
vulnerable and those who are young. We have to invest in
those generations. You said people don't have a right to own
a home, but every person in New Zealand surely has a right
to warm, safe, secure housing. And so we don't have
protection for renters here in New Zealand; our entire
housing market is stacked; it's in the favour of investors,
and so that's why we need to change the policies. If we
want New Zealand to do well in the long-term, to be
prosperous, to be fair, that everyone has a fair go, we need
policies that look after those people.
Boag: Well,
that's really nice, but the trouble is that the policies
that you come up with would cost tax-payers so much.
Genter: The evidence says that they are working.
Boag: Don't give me the evidence, because you've got no
idea about evidence.
All right. We're going
to have to leave it there, guys. Thanks to both teams —
the boomers and generation X and Y.
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