Employing a political economy analysis of need as it relates
to the ageing of
the population in the context of the postmodern welfare state, this paper
attempts to go beyond the narrow confines of the apocalyptic demography
argument that an increasing dependent older population represents social
and fiscal catastrophe. Older people are caught between a social ethic which
values independence on the one hand, and, on the other, a service ethic which
constructs them as dependent. This paper argues that this dichotomy between
dependence and independence results from a depoliticisation of need, in part
the legacy of a radical individualism combined with a postmodern therapeutic
ethic. The deeper issues which lie at the heart of the apocalyptic demography
argument have to do with issues of need, reciprocity, and community. This
paper argues further that a moral economy of interdependence, based on the
notion of reciprocity, transcends the dependency/independency dichotomy,
repoliticises need, and thereby creates the possibility of a revitalisation of civil
society.