"Essentially, they were saying 'I'm feeling I've lost control, I
can't plan'," she says, adding that
researchers were surprised because that
attitude runs counter to the image of
Americans as being independent people
responsible for their lives and their
future. Canadians, on the other hand, were
worried – but not panicked. And overall,
they continued to feel they had some control
over their lives.
The 50-to-64-year-old age group is a sandwich generation, often
caring for elderly parents on the one hand,
and still responsible for their children on
the other. In the meantime, they are trying
to save for retirement, which for many is
now on the horizon.
One thing the study found was that more middle-aged Americans than
Canadians are living in multi-generational
households. McDaniel says the study was not
able to identify why; however she wondered
whether it was an effect of the housing
bubble, as children who have lost a house
moved back in with their parents.
The study also showed how the recession disrupted expectations for
old age – and how there's a big difference
in expectations between Canada and the U.S.
Americans, says McDaniel, often reported that their expectations
for retirement had been shattered.
Canadians, however, felt that while some
things might be more difficult, socialized
medicine would keep them from going
bankrupt.
McDaniel says that as this cohort moves into old age, differences
and expectations will play out. If the
differences in the 50-to-64-year-old age
group continue as the cohort ages, she says
the experience of old age could end up being
very different in Canada than in the U.S.
Most people looking at old age today, she adds, base their views on
the experiences of people who are old now –
people who came of age when jobs were
plentiful, housing cheap and diversity rare.
"To build our thinking on the basis of what's going on with these
people today is wrong," she says.