Gen Z, the Demographic Timebomb and the Union’s Lifestyle Silo Problem

Mark McGeoghegan, a researcher at the Centre for Constitutional Change at Edinburgh University has published a study asking ‘Is Scottish independence inevitable?’ which looks at the relationship between birth cohort and secessionism in Scotland. In plain language – do people change their views on the constitution as they grow older?

McGeoghegan explains the background to the study:

“Since the 2014 independence referendum, a debate over the relationship between age and support for Scotland seceding from the United Kingdom has flared up regularly. Polls consistently show that the youngest voters are much more likely than older voters to support Scottish secession. The most recent Norstat poll for the Sunday Times found that among likely voters, 67% of those aged between 16 and 34 would vote Yes to independence, compared to less than 40% among those aged 55 and over. It is not unusual for polls to find even greater gaps between the youngest and oldest voters, and these figures are routinely deployed in arguments over whether Scottish secession is only a matter of time.”

“These arguments tend to break down along partisan lines. Supporters of secession often make what might be called the ‘actuarial’ argument: as older, less secessionist voters pass away, and as younger, more secessionist voters come of age and replace them in the electorate, the level of overall support for secession will rise until a persistent majority are in favour of Scottish secession. Their opponents typically respond with an argument rooted in prospect theory: as younger voters age, they will become more risk averse – due to having a mortgage, pension, savings, children, and so on – and thus will become less likely to support radical policies in general and secession from the United Kingdom in particular. This is, essentially, a variation on the argument that voters become more conservative as they age.”

For his research McGeoghegan used data from the Scottish Social Attitudes Survey collected between 1999 when the study first launched, and 2023. There are a few bits of jargon to get your head around.

The ‘Actuarial’ argument: as older, Unionist voters pass away, and as younger, more pro-independence voters come of age and replace them in the electorate, the level of overall support for independence will rise until a persistent majority are in favour of Scottish independence.

A ‘Cohort effect’ refers to differences between birth cohorts that persist over time, while ‘Lifecycle effects’ refer to changes that occur among a birth cohort as they age. A third type of effect, ‘Period effects’, refers to events that shift every birth cohort at the same time.

McGeoghegan used the Scottish Social Attitudes Survey which asked respondents ‘which of these statements comes closest to your view?

  1. Scotland should become independent, separate from the UK and the European Union.
  2. Scotland should become independent, separate from the UK but part of the European Union.
  3. Scotland should remain part of the UK, with its own elected parliament which has some taxation powers.
  4. Scotland should remain part of the UK, with its own elected parliament which has no taxation powers.
  5. Scotland should remain part of the UK without an elected parliament.’

Mark says: “I find no evidence that younger birth cohorts become less secessionist as they age.”

He concludes: “We started with a clear question: is the relationship between age and support for Scottish secession a cohort effect, a lifecycle effect, or a cohort effect mediated by a lifecycle effect? This analysis should lead us to reject the hypothesis that there is a lifecycle effect at work, at least until the passage of time, the collection of more data, and a reappraisal of the data convinces us otherwise. This is not the same as saying that there is no lifecycle effect at work or that no such effect could emerge in the future. But there is no evidence for such an effect right now.”

“The “actuarial” argument, however distasteful as prominent unionists have often found it, is better supported by the SSA data (20 waves from 1999-2023), than the lifecycle-effect counterargument.”

Mark adds the caveat that: “This should not be taken as evidence that independence is inevitable” and notes that opinions are malleable.

None of this should be surprising to anyone. But some of the reaction point to a wider problem for Unionists. The ‘prospect theory’ that they cling to, the idea that young radical independentistas will moderate their views as they have children, a pension and settle into  suburban idyll. But this vision is predicated on a Unionist dream, and locked into their own lifestyle silo.

Older, comfortably off Unionist voters (and journos) imagine a world of continuity, that is part of both the appeal and the trajectory of their worldview. Everything Just the Same Forever and Ever. UK:OK.

Yet as their most celebrated cheerleader, Gordon Brown, repeatedly tells us, living standards are crashing, and the best we should hope for is better and better foodbanks. The Unionist Imaginary of nationalist home-owners renouncing their foolish youth with its silly notions of living in a functioning democracy is a closed-world fantasy.

Comments (18)

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  1. John Learmonth says:

    The more fundamental problem is that the current fertility rate in Scotland is 1.3 children per woman, the lowest since records began in 1855.
    If this continues over several generations there soon won’t be any Scottish people!

    1. m says:

      Yes, and there is the ever increasing number of people from places in England selling up down South and buying property cheap in Scotland. This is actively encouraged by local and national government who seem to hate their own folk and think only of their own financial interests. With this current shower of rogues in charge Scotland is on a self destruct mission and the end is nigh.

      1. John says:

        m – I was born and lived in Scotland for the ally part of my working life before moving to England for a promoted post at work.
        I have retired and moved back to Scotland . Would you stop me moving to Scotland?

        1. m says:

          If the English in Scotland get a vote then the result will be same as last time, so, nay votes for the English, but then, what do you do with those that are half English & half Scottish, mibbe jist gie thim half a vote, or 2 votes for the totally Scottish person & one vote for the half & half.

          1. John says:

            Your reply says it all about the stupidity of a nativist argument.

        2. Matthew says:

          I can beat that. My grandmother was born illegitimately in England and smuggled across the border to be brought up by childless Scottish relatives.

          She married a Scot and they moved to England.

          My brother and I moved to Scotland 35+ years ago.

          My kids were born in Scotland but live in London.

          So who gets a vote????

      2. Niemand says:

        My question is in what way is this ‘actively encouraged’?

        Nay votes for the English. Just the English to be excluded then, not people from elsewhere in the world living in Scotland? Or them too?

        Can’t wait for the compulsory ancestry tests! Be a right laugh and not reminiscent of anything bad at all.

  2. Dougie Blackwood says:

    I’d be delighted if the numbers supporting independence continue to rise. The benefits of independence are clear to any that look at the facts.

    Unfortunately we have difficulties working against this rising independence trend. Every part of the Main Stream Media, with the sole exception of The National, pushes out only negative reports and tame unionist propaganda. The debate is further fed by manufactured dispute between SNP, Alba and Greens, each seeking party advantage over the others.

    There is little wonder that some previously committed independence supporters switch off from the fray.

    Most of us know these things and yearn for the positive campaigning that was the norm in the run up to September 2014. I well remember packed non-partisan meetings where supporters all worked together regardless of party label.

    1. Alex McCulloch says:

      Well said Dougie

      A collective approach supporting and influencing the SNP to further develop and communicate a positive alternative could be worthwhile?

  3. m says:

    @John, Now John, I would not advise you to walk down to the polling station in the nude, people have been arrested for such behaviour in the past, & rightly so in my humble opinion

    1. James mills says:

      Are you confusing ‘nativist’ with ‘naturist’ ? That lays bare your prejudice !

      1. Derek says:

        B’dum tish!

  4. m says:

    I’d vote for a hedgehog or a wee rabbit afore I’d vote for a human being, bunch a scum in my opinion

  5. Graeme Purves says:

    Doh! Why can’t we all think just like Chris Deerin?

  6. Andy Lyall says:

    I find the actuarial argument bemusing. The past 15 years (or, really, 30/35) have demonstrated that the UK model is shot. It’s tied to the US model of extracting value from the public purse and passing it to the super rich. Nobody outside the top x% is winning from this. Public services continue to struggle, whilst privatisation is shown up to be the nonsense many thought, meanwhile we get austerity upon austerity. No, my pension and pension would be better outwith a failing UK.

    1. John says:

      Andy – we have now reached the ridiculous point where the wealth gap between the richest and the rest of society has grown so much that the richest are complaining they are having to pay a larger chunk than rest of us in taxation. The reality is they may pay a larger chunk but they are not paying any more as a proportion of their wealth. It is a consequence of rising inequality in a progressive taxation system. We are now being told that very rich will leave the country if they are asked to contribute more and politicians telling us that the country cannot afford to lose the super wealthy.
      I predict that wealthiest will be demanding the end to progressive taxation system or they may leave next.
      This is all the rather predictable outcome of the neoliberal economic policies of last 40 years.

      1. Niemand says:

        And isn’t it always so telling how those with the most also complain the most about tax and threats to their way of life? This seems especially true in the US – look at all those moaning billionaire.

        I agree up to a point about the current public services’ model help make the rich richer but things are still quite different in the UK compared to the US where ‘public services’ as such barely exist and where they do, the funding of them makes ours look generous. It also begs the question of what a ‘public’ service is in 2025 Something can be a public service but still privately run. Is this always bad? Having lived through the period of widespread nationalisation, I am not convinced it is. Trouble is we do not seem to be mature enough to be able to envisage and run a service privately that does not disproportionately reward the owners and encourage poorer service as a result. There is a venality always lurking. Translate that to a nationalised service and you get corruption and waste instead. Yet we should be able to do both well.

        1. John says:

          Niemand – I would suggest that utilities and services that constitute a basic need for all citizens should be in public ownership. You may also add utilities which are of strategic importance to the country.
          There are a variety of public ownership which can help make public services as efficient as possible.
          I would add that nothing produces as much waste as the private ownership of water south of the border!

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