It was once said that each generation builds a world the next must live in. The Baby Boomers—born into the post-war affluence and ideological certainty of the mid-20th century—constructed much of the cultural, economic, and institutional architecture of Western society.
Their reign, observable everywhere from boardrooms to broadcast networks, has lasted far longer than that of their generational predecessors. But increasingly, the culture Boomers forged appears to be not just aged, but aging badly—brittle, out of tune, and often at odds with the lived experience and aspirations of Millennials and Gen Z.
A Legacy of Dominance
The Boomer generation, roughly those born between 1946 and 1964, came of age in an era of economic expansion, social revolution, and technological innovation. They were both the architects and beneficiaries of a Western golden age—a time when jobs were plentiful, housing affordable, and in which the social contract was being upheld. In the United States and much of Western Europe, Boomers became the dominant force in politics, business, and the media, shaping not only economic policies but cultural tastes and social values.
This dominance was reflected in everything from the explosion of suburban life to the idea of the ‘American Dream’, exported globally, as the ultimate telos of personal success. Even as they challenged earlier norms during the upheavals of the 1960s and ’70s, Boomers quickly established new ones of their own—often more entrenched than those they had toppled.
For Millennials (born between 1981 and 1996) and Gen Z (born between 1997 and 2012), the Boomer vision of the good life feels increasingly like a mirage. Home ownership—once a rite of passage—is now a distant aspiration for many. Stable jobs with the promise of pensions and benefits have given way to precarious gig work and burnout-prone hustle culture. Rising education costs, stagnant wages, and a dysfunctional dating and mating scene have redrawn the emotional and economic terrain of their adulthood.
The generational gap goes beyond the material. Much of mainstream media, politics, and even corporate messaging still uses the language of the boomers—one that presumes upward mobility, valorises individualism, and treats digital life as an adjunct rather than a foundation. Social media and edgy meme culture—all central to Millennial and Gen Z life—are often misrepresented or dismissed outright in legacy institutions still run by those who came of age when rotary phones were considered cutting-edge technology.
This misalignment leads to recurring cultural flashpoints. Boomer commentary on youth movements is frequently perceived as patronising or tone-deaf. Conversely, younger generations often lampoon Boomer sensibilities as outdated or irrelevant. The now-ubiquitous phrase ‘OK Boomer’ captures the intergenerational exasperation well.
Gatekeepers Refusing to Retire
A defining feature of Boomer political and cultural power is its longevity. Unlike previous generations, many Boomers have delayed retirement, clinging to their influence across nearly all sectors.
In politics, septuagenarian leaders remain a common sight—from Joe Biden and Donald Trump in the US, to prominent figures in not only European politics, but Russian, Indian, and Chinese as well. In media, executives and editorial voices who rose during the print and network television eras still steer much of the public conversation. Even in the corporate world, Boomer-era management philosophies often prevail, despite the growing disaffection of younger employees.
The result is a cultural bottleneck. While Millennials and Gen Z produce vast amounts of content and shape an ascendant new culture online, their ability to shape structural decisions is limited by the inertia of a system still run by those who grew up in an analog age.
Perhaps the most profound divide is philosophical. Boomers grew up in a world where progress seemed linear, institutions dependable, and national narratives coherent. Theirs was a culture of control—of managing uncertainty through systems, rules, and hierarchies. But for Millennials and Gen Z, the world is defined by flux. Geopolitical instability and cultural fragmentation are not aberrations but constants.
Younger generations thus prize adaptability over certainty, inclusion over hierarchy, and experimentation over tradition. Their cultural expressions reflect a worldview in which legacy systems are not to be revered but, if not wholly done away with, reimagined.
The chasm is not insurmountable. Many Boomers, after all, were once radicals themselves —and some remain active allies in intergenerational struggles. But meaningful cultural renewal will require more than sporadic understanding. It demands a genuine transfer of power.
For now, however, the younger generations continue to operate in the shadow of a cultural empire whose architects still refuse to hand over their drawing tools. The question is no longer whether the Boomer-built world is out of sync with its heirs—that much is clear. The question is when, and how, the inheritance will be passed—and how much of it will be allowed to survive.
Statement
The Boomer generation built the postwar Western order and has refused to let go of the reins. Their grip on institutions has outlasted their cultural relevance, leaving Millennials and Gen Z burdened with expectations for themselves that have become unrealistic: housing is unaffordable, and the social contract has been eroded. A generation raised on abundance now presides over scarcity, insisting on relevance in a world they barely understand. Younger cohorts aren’t just alienated—they’re busy crafting alternatives. But until the Boomer class yields real power, renewal remains stalled. The deeper question isn’t succession—it’s salvage: what, if anything, from the Boomer-built world deserves to be saved?