In my opinion the problem began in the 60s , Jobs became scarcer ,and we were officially told to 'get on our bikes' and follow the jobs .
We did, moving hundreds of miles from family and friends , meaning our children grew up not seeing family regularly, and when they did , they'd travelled for many hours and were tired and fractious . Our parents never saw the bright and happy kids, just tired over excited ones , who they then spoilt because they hadn't seen them for months .
Moving on our parents now need help, love and care , but we live hundreds of miles away ,in jobs which we daren't risk by taking time off , Our parents cling to the old and familiar and won't move closer to us , because they still have familiar routines and places . Our kids now have children and live locally to us , so we are regular babysitters, and don't want to leave them behind to move nearer to our parents.
Our government don't need to worry about the explosion of baby boom elderly, we are killing ourselves trying to be all things to everyone and not letting anyone down .
Life was much simpler when jobs were secure, and families lived cheek by jowl in the same town , all there to help or advise . Children grew up knowing (and respecting) elderly relatives and the whole family rallied around when someone was ill or in trouble .
How often have you reassured distant parents or children that things were fine when they weren't .