Chapter 61: Chapter 61

john Francis did not consider himself to be one of the baby-boom generation,

he was born in February 1940, a little too early to have enjoyed some of the

advantages of the early period of the consumer society. On the other hand his

generation had never known a time when work was hard to come by. His

generation saw credit as something almost shameful, not to be talked about. It was

those who came a little after him who were the first to experience the full

advantages of the consumer society, imported into Britain from America; a

generation now accused by some of being the most selfish generation in history.

The generation reaching adulthood at the beginning of the second decade of the

third millennium, owners of iPhones and such electronic marvels, would not be so

lucky. They were faced with a crisis that would certainly be much more drawn out

than politicians pretended. To make matters worse they were condemned for not

being of the same the metal as those who had lived through the Great Depression,

fought WWII, and survived the rigours of the post-war austerity.

Once a university degree had been the key to success, then suddenly, almost

overnight that meant very little, especially when it came to finding a job. The

prospect of unemployment, or underemployment, hung over the future of graduates

like the Sword of Damocles, whose lives would be considerably more difficult than

it had been for the generation their parents’.

Whose was the fault? Had the baby-boomers condemned their children by

offering democracy and capitalism to Russia and China? Had they created

expectations beyond the reach of their children in offering them access to higher

education?

Francis certainly did not feel uncomfortable about being a member of his own

generation. The hazards of history had played an important role. Those born in the

years of austerity that followed WWI were not responsible for the Depression or

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Hitler’s war.

In retrospective, the late fifties-early sixties were seen as carefree years. Francis

remembered them as years during which he and those like him had worked, with

few holidays and tight budgets. National Service had ended leaving soldiery to the

professionals, allowing those who had embarked on a career to progress. It was a

time when Harold Macmillan, in 1957, had told Britons they had never had it so

good, which was true—in comparison to the war years and the bleak austerity that

had followed. Life in Britain at the time of Macmillan’s government was simple to

say the least; bananas were hidden under the counter, kept only for the most

favoured customers. Family cars were so rare Francis could play cricket with his

pals in the middle of the Pimlico’s streets.

Compared to 2010, those were the good times, without the same material needs,

with full employment, a guaranteed career…before jobs were exported to China by

globalization, a process that left countless school leavers without the meanest hope

of finding work.

Francis had grown-up under the shadow of the Soviet Union. When an enraged

Khrushchev, backed by his massive nuclear arsenal, harangued the West by

banging his shoe on the speaker’s rostrum of the United Nations Assembly in New

York, he felt a shiver of fear like the majority of his contemporaries in the West.

The real consumer society came later, much later, in the mid-eighties when

people could look to a future of ever-growing wealth, when the horn of plenty

started to flow over. Not only that, but people lived longer, in better health, they

were also better educated, enjoyed foreign holidays and discovered the world. Life

became easier as the hard chores of the previous generation gradually disappeared

with the appearance of washing machines, dish washers, microwave ovens, when

modern designer kitchens became commonplace. People became better informed

with the arrival of cable television and more recently Internet. What had been

luxuries for the previous generation had become essential for families that thought

nothing of owning two or more cars.

The crisis brought change. Suddenly higher education was no longer free and

graduates were no longer guaranteed a job. A university education meant little or

nothing for many and for the new generation the future was transformed into one

of diminishing expectations.