"Since the New Deal — and especially since the Great Society — America has chosen an accelerating transfer of wealth from young to old.  Some of this was necessary and desirable. Many seniors face a period of  economic struggle toward the end of life, which entitlements have  effectively, compassionately eased.
But longer lives have extended  this period of dependence, while health-care inflation has dramatically  increased the cost of the Medicare entitlement. According to Andrew Biggs of the American Enterprise Institute,  someone who retires today will pay for less than half of the Medicare  benefits he or she is likely to receive over a lifetime — a subsidy  given to even the wealthiest retirees. The balance of these costs is  imposed on workers or added in debt.
The problem is that there are  two periods of economic dependence in life — late and early. A healthy  society not only cares for its elderly but also cultivates its children.  Biggs estimates that the federal government now spends $6 on seniors  for every $1 it spends on children, even though the poverty rate of  children is much higher.
From a historical perch a century hence,  this will seem an odd, sad decision. A country that increases taxes on  current workers and encumbers children with debt to maintain unreformed  health entitlements is looking backward. Unless this course shifts,  America will have a continually diminished capacity to invest in  children and young families. It is the evidence of a generation that  prefers its own future comfort to the welfare and ambitions of  generations to follow. And this attitude is the mark of a tired nation."
~Michael Gerson in yesterday's Washington Post  
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→The Mark of a Tired Nation: Today's Retirees Pay Less Than 50% of Their Lifetime Medicare Benefits
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→https://manufacturing-holdings.blogspot.com/2011/08/mark-of-tired-nation-today-retirees-pay.html
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