A Streak of Hypocrisy: Reactions to the Global Financial Crisis and Generational Debt

Jeremy SammutDecember 15, 2008PM90

This paper examines the policy challenges associated with the ageing of the Australian population through the prism of the global financial crisis. The paper observes that much of the commentary prompted by the financial crisis has featured a reaction against credit-driven consumption—the so-called ‘debt binge’ that has plunged household savings into the red in recent years—and a shift in sentiment that favours traditional values such as thrift.

There is a streak of hypocrisy about the reaction to the financial crisis because of what isn’t being said about the most important issues concerning the national saving culture or lack thereof.

Jeremy Sammut is a research fellow at the Centre for Independent Studies. He has a PhD in history. This is his fourth contribution to the Papers in Health and Ageing series.

 

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