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Jilted Generation: How Britain Has Bankrupted Its Youth
 
 

Jilted Generation: How Britain Has Bankrupted Its Youth [Kindle Edition]

Ed Howker , Shiv Malik
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)

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Review

Jilted Generation is a tirade of fury... Ed Howker and Shiv Malik stake out their complaint with a waspishness which comes from personal experience - the struggle to find somewhere to live in London, and to find a secure job...the evidence of pokey overpriced housing and endless unpaid internships piles up convincingly
--Madeleine Bunting, Guardian

There's a new and noisy book just out which you must read to discover why the young and the old are shouting at each other over the supper table in a way I've not heard since those great divides over drugs'n'rock'n'roll or even the Iraq invasion. --Margareta Pagano, Independent

Howker and Malik extend their analysis beyond an it's-not-fair tantrum to knit together a taut and analytically rigorous narrative of 25 years of political myopia and mismanagement, outlining a series of gross policy errors that have disproportionately benefited the old at the expense of the young. These mistakes are likely to loom large over the UK for decades --Miles Johnson, Spectator

Jilted Generation...brilliantly analyses the problems faced by today's generation of young adults --Joyce MacMillan, Scotsman

A heady cocktail...that's enough to make anyone's blood boil. At times the writers become true polemicists... a compelling narrative that explains exactly how serial ministers' focus on individuals as "self-interested and motive purely by money" has influenced our politics --Alex Stevenson, Politics.co.uk

Provocative
--Robert Colvile, Telegraph

Following those books a fourth has just come out. Only last week we had the launch of an excellent book, The Jilted Generation: How Britain Has Bankrupted Its Youth by Ed Howker and Shiv Malik. They mount an argument very similar to mine with powerful evidence of the raw deal for young people in the jobs market, in housing, and in pensions and savings. --David Willetts, in a speech to the Policy Exchange

Ed Howker and Shiv Malik have written a critique of capitalism that is as powerful and provocative as anything written by Marx and Engels. --Tribune, Dec 2010

The book is hard to argue with. --Bright Green, August 2010

`You must read it to discover why the young and the old are shouting at each other over the supper table in a way I've not heard since those great divides over drugs'n'rock'n'roll or even the Iraq invasion.' --The Independent on Sunday

`Howker and Malik knit together a taut and analytically rigorous narrative of 25 years of political myopia and mismanagement, outlining a series of gross policy errors that have disproportionately benefited the old at the expense of the young. These mistakes are likely to loom large over the UK for decades' --The Spectator

`What the authors eloquently trace is the consequences of a breathtakingly foolhardy thirty-year experiment in dismantling the state and individualising responsibility that has led straight to the debt crisis we face today. We should applaud their forensic skill in exposing the rarely discussed assumptions that have led us who ere are, and in setting out the consequences in concrete terms' --The Oldie

`Jilted Generation brilliantly analyses the problems faced by today's generation of young adults' --The Scotsman

`An excellent analysis of the hardship and inequity faced by today's generation of young people'
--Morning Star

Product Description

Born after September 1979? Struggling to find a decent job, even though you're a graduate? Can't afford to buy or even rent a house? No prospects? Welcome to the jilted generation. Drawing on their own startling new research and writing with an irresistible polemical energy, twenty-something journalists Ed Howker and Shiv Malik argue that, in stark contrast to their parents' generation, millions of young Britons today face themost uncertain future since the early 1930s. Radical, angry and passionate, Jilted Generation takes a closer look at who's to blame for locking out Britain's youth - and leaving our country not just broken but broke.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Well written, informative, thought provoking and deeply depressing for anyone unlucky enough to be born too late. This book explains why we are where we are. Unlike many of the current offerings which jump on the band wagon of blaming the bankers, this thoughtful and well researched text holds back from the easy blame game and uses authoritative statistics to explain carefully the various difficulties Britain's young adults have been experiencing for the past few years. What many thought was just the result of reckless lending policies over the past decade, leading to overinflated house prices, a financial crash causing recession and unemployment, is shown to have its ultimate roots decades earlier. The realisation of which is that unless there is a paradigm shift in British politics then this will be a lost generation, paying for the short term decisions of our elders and denied many of their advantages.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Written by two twenty-something journalists this very readable book has a good go at explaining why the prospects for Britain's young people haven't looked so bleak for a long, long time and why much of the predicament they now find themselves in is as a result of the changes in society brought about by their parent's generation - those now over fifty, the so-called 'babyboomers'.

The book is divided into four chapters with each covering what the authors regard as the most pressing issues facing young people growing up in Britain today:- "Housing", "Jobs", "Inheritance" and "Politics". Every gripe you'd expect to see is here. The ridiculous price of houses, job insecurity, low pay, crap education, tuition fees, over-taxation, over-indebtedness, rampant consumerism and, of course, the appalling state of the public finances and that looming £1.3 trillion of government debt that the jilted generation correctly assume they'll be paying off for the rest of their lives - courtesy of one Mr G. Brown and the Labour Party [as voted for by - yes - you guessed it, the babyboomers!]. However, armed with numerous graphs and tables Howker and Malik set about sticking it to post-war governments of all persuasions especially Thatcher's Tories and Blair and Brown's New Labour - as well as giving their parent's generation a bloody good hiding along the way too.

For me, as a member of so-called 'Generation X' that sits between the babyboomers and the jilted generation, I thought Chapter 4 - "Politics" - was the most interesting. I found the authors' assertion that the origins of today's self-centred society lie in 1960s Marxist counter-culture to be a particularly well articulated and persuasive argument and one I hadn't come across before.

Anyhow, if you're a young person growing up in Britain today or, like me, you just care about what happens to our young people and feels they're getting a raw deal from the new liberal-left establishment then please do read this book. Perhaps the old cliche "blame the parents" is right after all.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Captivating 1 May 2011
Format:Paperback
Everyone under 30 needs to read this book. For so many years I've been feeling so frustrated without clearly understanding why. Why is it I'm 27, earn almost as much as my parents combined and can't afford to buy a house? How can I have a stable relationship when my partner and I are constantly moving to find work? How come I can't find a great job when I have a 1st class degree? This book takes all the half formed thoughts that have been flying around my head, and articulates them fully, providing a wealth of research to support their argument.

It's somber reading, but somehow reassuring to know that actually, it's not just you, you are trying hard, and this situation has been decades in the making. Asides from being interesting reading, and essential cannon fodder for the next person who tells you that young people have it easy, this book, if anything, shows why young people need to rekindle their interest in politics
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Good Synopsis
This is easy to read, explaining how extracvagtant spending to appease the baby boomers has left a legacy of debt that is affecting our children. Read more
Published 17 days ago by Yvonne S
Good but....
A good read which summarises the tough world out there for the younger generation. But the authors oversimplify by laying the blame at the door of the baby boomers as if it was a... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Mike Keay
Yes, but
Well, I am of the older generation presumed to have had it easy but it did not seem like that to me at the time. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Bookworm
Very persuasive analysis
This is the best analysis that I have read so far - and by a big margin - of the massive, overwhelming problem that it describes. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Mr. J. Dardis
Not much new but it's as well to get it set down clearly
I'm going to start with two admissions. I wouldn't have bought this book if it hadn't been a Kindle Daily Deal at 99p and I am a baby boomer. Read more
Published 2 months ago by S. B. Kelly
Ungrateful generation
Incoherent carping by the me,me,me generation. I want it all ,I want it now. The authors aren't even aware how smugly entitled they appear moaning on about not having enough, soon... Read more
Published 5 months ago by NikonD3100
A subject we should all be concerned about
I'm one of the 'never had it so good' baby boomer generation. This book details how political and financial decisions made since the Second World War are impacting very negatively... Read more
Published 7 months ago by DebbieB
Honest and to the point
This is a good book and the realities highlighted make for interesting reading. Maybe some of the political elite could give it a read and try and learn a thing or two about... Read more
Published 7 months ago by sohiab
Interesting statistics, badly argued
This book contains some very well put together statistics, although the style of prose badly lets it down. Read more
Published 7 months ago by ChrisG
The previous generation robs the youth of today and tomorrow
This book tells the story of how the previous generation foolishly stole a fantastic quality of life from the youth of not just today's Britain, but also that of the youth of the... Read more
Published 9 months ago by Rob
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Popular Highlights

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&quote;
If food costs had gone up as fast as house prices, a pint of milk would cost £2.43, a jar of coffee would cost £20.22, and a chicken would cost £47.50 (and thats a standard battery chicken, not an organic, sandal-wearing chicken).9 To put it another way, if in 1970 you invested £4,975  the average price of a house  into the housing market, youd get back over £220,000 by 2009. If you put that money into a bank account that rose with the price of everything except housing  fuel, clothes, food, cars  you would receive around £50,000. &quote;
Highlighted by 13 Kindle users
&quote;
In this respect the UK state pension operates like a Ponzi scheme  almost identical to the operation run by the New York investor Bernie Madoff. &quote;
Highlighted by 13 Kindle users
&quote;
And theres a more subtle problem with the way in which that debt is apportioned  it infantilises us. How much assistance the state will provide each student is contingent not on the wealth of the undergraduate, but on the wealth of their parents. And thats very odd. Its recognition by the state that school-leavers, despite the fact that they are legal adults, are still actually children formally dependent on their parents for their own lifestyles. &quote;
Highlighted by 11 Kindle users

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