Well, while I have criticism for the cultural shifts that have resulted in worst outcomes for incoming generations I also recognise that the main wealth transfer over the years is less to sensible pensioners who have been careful with their money but to the super-rich who make their wealth look like peanuts.....and are careful to keep that wealth in non reachable domains.
So government ends up squeezing those middle classes who can't bugger off, pensioners or not and the poor on welfare.
If you follow the real money it's not with Mr and Mrs Normy.
Very much agree with the thrust of your post, and again, I'm not suggesting any wild squeezing of Mr & Mrs Normy - I just struggle with any of these assertions that somehow pensioners are the hard done by ones.
Even with your post above, the use of language like "sensible pensioners who have been careful with their money" is what I struggle with - people today could be as sensible and careful as they like, they will never have the opportunity to accrue the wealth that current pensioners have.
There are still huge swathes of the population, many of whom are pensioners, who still think we live in a country where if you just work hard and put some money away each month, you can own a home and raise a family and live a comfortable life, because that's what they did.
The bar has completely moved, and rather than accept that, we societally tie ourselves in knots about spending habits and 'hard work', all to appease the egos of a generation who got to play an entirely different game.
Increasingly the key indicator to a young person's financial future is how much their dad is worth - not their education, not their job, not how hard they work and certainly not how many coffees they buy.
But it's also worth highlighting that the wealthy pensioner who owns 4 buy-to-lets is very much 'guilty' of a wealth transfer from ordinary working families, who in previous generations would have owned their home - I'm not necessarily blaming them for this, but it's relevant if we're talking about growing wealth inequality.