Letter: Time to get behind ‘forgotten generation’

Wednesday 6th May 2009, 7:24AM BST.

Elderly people are suffering greater discrimination than ever before and millions of them are saying “Our lives are getting worse!”

Their belief that they are the “forgotten generation” will strike a chord with many of your readers.

More than half of Britain’s elderly think they are treated like little children once they reach old age. Some 64 per cent of the elderly say NHS staff, do not always treat them with dignity or respect, while 68 per cent believe politicians see them as a low priority. This view has been strengthened by the treatment they are receiving during the current economic climate. Loneliness, depression, poverty and neglect blight the lives of millions of older folk and evidence shows that for many the situation is getting worse, not better.

Attitudes to older people are stuck in the past; care and support are on the brink of collapse. Successive governments have largely ignored the experiences of pensioners suffering from isolation and exclusion.

This year began as one of uncertainty for older people, but it could be a year of opportunity. Plans for a new government strategy on ageing, a green paper on social care reform and a looming general election could help deliver transformational change in the lives of the elderly. This year has the potential to break the pattern of older people living their lives in misery.

Are not older folk in our region entitled to ask a simple question: “Are the authorities absolutely certain there no other ways of saving more money and causing less distress to ‘the forgotten generation’?”

Perhaps one place they could start would be with the £1 in every £5 paid in council tax that goes towards local authority pensions. I am sure no-one disagrees with the system of local authority pensions, it is the use of council tax monies to help fund those pensions that is disturbing to many council tax payers. If this country is rich enough to shower the bankers – who are responsible for the predicament that we find ourselves in – with largess, surely our erstwhile Chancellor, if he has the slightest concern for the plight of pensioners, could immediately agree to a reduction in the level of taxation applicable to interest on their savings.

Perhaps we need to raise our voices beyond the whisper that we are using at the moment so that we can truly say that we have respect for the elderly, not only here, but throughout the United Kingdom.

Roy C Girdler, Cherrywood Green, Bilston.


  1. 1
    woolibuga

    Think too of the British Ex-Pat pensioner who has paid into the UK infrastructure for a full working life and in many cases fought for the UK in times of conflict and now resides in Commonwealth Countries to be with family! … who is denied pension indexing by a Mean Spirited British Government! ……… add to this the fact that they are now not making any demands on the Social Infrastructure of the UK …….

    The British Government is considered a pariah amongst other nations whilst it subscribes wholeheartedly to an intake of peoples who have never contributed anything to the social infrastructure of Britain …………

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  2. 2
    brian

    The young and the old should be our priority in our society today. The cash out of your council tax for pensions has always been specualation and always promoted by the tax payers alliance. Take a look at their web site and you will see its very tory supportive!!!

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  3. 3
    Connor Davies

    Whilst I don’t disagree that there is a large amount of discrimination against older people, there’s also a massive amount of discrimination against younger people. There’s also masssive discimination and prejudice against immigrants, as poster number 1 so cearly demonstrates.

    Could you name the source of your statistics, and also source your claim that millions of them are saying their lives are getting worse?

    Perhaps the feeling that life is getting worse is simply part of the process of growing old, and has been a curse of older generations since time began? Some people call it nostalgia.

    Notwithstanding that, the proportion of older people is only going to grow, as so few of us are having children and most of us are living longer.

    The problem, as always, is with attitudes. We instantly look to “the government” to solve our problems when we want them to, and then kick and scream like little children when government intervenes when we don’t – we can’t have it both ways.

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