Everyone will argue with their own statistics, but I think your general sentiment is correct.
Everyone seems to think the oldies had it easy in the good ol' days and the youngens are a bunch of lazy good-for-nothins.
There are probably certain a ways it has gotten easier and others in which it is worse... But I think this is more about generational sentiment than actual facts.
thats not really true though, we have the numbers. In real terms, education, healthcare, and housing costs have grown at a much higher rate than inflation. It is more expensive to go to college, pay rent, and stay healthy now than it was 30/40/50 years ago.
Housing seems to be the primary issue, but you’ll find very little support for actually fixing the issue - more and taller buildings in densely populated areas.
I don’t think people have a problem with spending more on education, they just want a reasonable return on investment for it. Turns out pumping money into monopolistic schools doesn’t get you a better result
The boomer generation was more or less promised that housing was the key to social mobility. And it was for a large number of people. It's hard for that to remain true now, and there's a ton of negative externalities. It's not like these people were experts on real estate policy before, they just don't have perspective on how it differs for the young.
"Not liking change" is disingenuous, even if, broadly speaking, older people don't actually like change
Everyone seems to think the oldies had it easy in the good ol' days and the youngens are a bunch of lazy good-for-nothins.
There are probably certain a ways it has gotten easier and others in which it is worse... But I think this is more about generational sentiment than actual facts.