Ed Miliband owes Coffee House contributor Ed Howker a drink. In his speech today, the Labour leader borrows the
central idea — and the title — of the stunningly insightful book that Ed wrote with Shiv
Malik last year, Jilted Generation: How Britain Bankrupted its Youth. It is, basically
speaking, the idea that the current generation of twenty-somethings is, in many respects, disadvantaged in comparison their baby-boomer forbears. From the burden of dealing with debt, both personal
and national, to the fluctuations of the housing and labour markets, young people are up against it. And it may get worse. As Miliband puts it, “I am worried — and every parent should be
worried — about what will happen to our children in the coming decades.”
I’ve been saying for some time that politicians ought to concentrate on the poisonous cocktail of problems facing young people — so it would be silly to criticise Miliband for doing just that today.

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