Millennials & Gen-Z are Poorer Than Ever (Here’s Why)

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • This is why Millennials and Gen-Z are broke and poorer than ever. There are many reasons to blame, but housing, tuition, credit card debt, and demographic factors are all to blame. Enjoy the vid!
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Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @humphrey
    @humphrey  8 месяцев назад +36

    Subscribe to my free 🐪 Hump Days Newsletter ➭ humpdays.substack.com

    • @annagrace1159
      @annagrace1159 7 месяцев назад +2

      It's going to be up to GEN X to get the economy of working smarter not harder to help the future gens but that's if they want to be innovative and hungry at the same time grateful and giving

    • @thatassholemattmurray
      @thatassholemattmurray 7 месяцев назад

      It's because we don't need money to be happy.

    • @roxaskinghearts
      @roxaskinghearts 7 месяцев назад +1

      We are expected to compete with tesla you know the dubai supporter the company who expects us to compete with india and sx trafficking muslim nations

    • @thatShelbyMo
      @thatShelbyMo 6 месяцев назад +2

      The average monthly salary in Algeria is 260 dollars, therefore it will take you 16 years to save up enough cash to purchase a respectable apartment with two bedrooms.

    • @Erick726
      @Erick726 4 месяца назад

      I know it's not the point of the video but comparing the US to other countries like the UK is misleading. Most westernized countries have universal healthcare where the US does not.

  • @erika1995
    @erika1995 Год назад +5023

    I got married young. No student debt. No car payment. We still can’t afford a house, let alone the crazy rents in our area.

  • @drizzho
    @drizzho Год назад +2456

    The worst part is that the majority of people paying rent pay almost double what a mortgage loan costs per month, but cannot get approved for a mortgage because we cannot save due to the rent being so high

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Год назад +76

      A lot of people in the real estate business are trying to convince rich people to buy their stuff. So, they can make easy cash.
      And besides, there's no law saying they can't.

    • @drizzho
      @drizzho Год назад +79

      @@eksbocks9438 there should be so working Americans can have what was once called the “American Dream” of owning your own property and starting a family. At least some type of law where the entry for first time home buyers is way more accepting. (Records of rent payment on time for more than a year, credit score ect.)

    • @steven121290
      @steven121290 Год назад +48

      The reason rent is high is because everyone wants to live in luxury apartments, which.... is more expensive.
      Live 45 minutes away in and old apartment and you can save up just fine. I lived with a roommate in an old 2 room condo for $2k/month total ($1k each) when everyone else was paying $3-4k/month. And I was living 10 min away from downtown HCOL where my work was.
      I now bought my first house driving a sports convertible on a single income. No, I'm not one of those tech people who got paid out in stocks.
      The problem with the current generation is not that things are too expensive. The issue is that they're all too entitled and believe they deserve the best no matter what stage in life they're at.
      Spending more than half your income on luxury apartments and eating out everyday is simply irresponsible. The last generation didn't do that, why should we?

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Год назад +247

      @@steven121290 You're the entitled one.
      A lot of people in my city said rent used to be $400/month. Now it's $2000 because real estate people are trying to get rich tourists (Doctors, Businessmen, etc) to buy their stuff.
      It's not even a luxury home. Old houses from the 60's made into rentals.

    • @steven121290
      @steven121290 Год назад +11

      @@eksbocks9438 Let's give you the benefit of the doubt. Where is this exactly? Because it's hard to imagine $2,000/month normal rent for a tourist city unless you're smack downtown in very sought after locations.
      i.e. Sacramento (california) averages less than $2k rent/month. And that's a HCOL working city. Most tourist cities are LCOL or MCOL

  • @GuerrillaGorilla023
    @GuerrillaGorilla023 Год назад +2479

    Have to love the fact that I passed 30, have no accidents on my record and my car insurance continues to go up

    • @Zzzsleepzzz
      @Zzzsleepzzz Год назад +89

      Same

    • @Tyler-Lord
      @Tyler-Lord Год назад +49

      That's just the area you live in doing that to you

    • @FangerZero
      @FangerZero Год назад +103

      It's because of all the other idiots in the world who can't drive, as well as the thefts. Not to mention simply having to pay their employees more, unless of course their employees want a stagnant wage.

    • @biohazardlnfS
      @biohazardlnfS Год назад +235

      ​@@FangerZero They don't pay their employees more 🙄 unless you mean the executive bonuses

    • @pbassassinz8097
      @pbassassinz8097 Год назад +16

      If you changed cars it will go up I sold my Toyota and got a bmw my car insurance doubled didn't find out till after I bought the car lol.

  • @alessandropizzocaro7506
    @alessandropizzocaro7506 7 месяцев назад +426

    I'm 30.
    I'm single.
    I don't drink, I don't smoke, I don't party.
    I work a regular job in Italy.
    I can save a little bit of money each month but not much at all.
    It is beyond my comprehension how someone like me could ever afford a house or even just a car (I don't have a car) .
    We basically work out asses off just to cover food and rent
    It is a rotten world we live in.
    I can't even imagine how people my age are doing in poorer countries.
    And I can't even imagine how people who must provide for their family can get by these days.
    I hate all this, that's no life man.
    Time to go off grid and say goodbye to this rotten system.

    • @MarkGeuel
      @MarkGeuel 2 месяца назад

      capitalsits are rotteh. the rich just keeps wanting to get richer. and the problem is, they always have their way. and we can't do anything about it. maybe the government can, but capitalsits can buy them easily. It's this way in the Philippines where I live.

    • @d1ssolv3r
      @d1ssolv3r 2 месяца назад +15

      Wish I could go off grid, raise some sheep and crops.. That cost a lot of money to do though 😂

    • @RafikiusMaximillius
      @RafikiusMaximillius 2 месяца назад +12

      All land is owned by the governments until you buy your own land. There is no going off grid. It isn't the 70's anymore. I think that is the actual topic here. NO longer any rights to do anything other than stay home. Any home.

    • @bohne8746
      @bohne8746 2 месяца назад

      @@RafikiusMaximilliusand the government is….

    • @RafikiusMaximillius
      @RafikiusMaximillius 2 месяца назад +1

      @@bohne8746 The Government!

  • @charlesnorm4883
    @charlesnorm4883 Год назад +11121

    As someone living with his parents in London, it’s nice to know that the data shows I’m officially screwed and it’s not just me being lazy
    Edit: I’ve noticed some people getting very triggered by this and going off on some Rocky Balboa speech about working hard and ‘taking what’s yours’ - you all need to calm tf down and look at the data. I should mention, I have a good amount of money saved. I have a high paying salary in comparison to most people in my field in London. But there is no denial that inflation has absolutely decimated the middle class. What someone in my position would have been able to afford 30 years ago isn’t possible today. I don’t drink, smoke or go out so I’m not wasting money on crap.
    I’m not saying that it isn’t impossible to break out - I’m working my arse off everyday to get ahead I have every faith I will someday - but I am saying it’s much harder than it was before and the data proves that. So calm down Rocky Balboa’s of RUclips and save your rants for the mirror.

    • @RGE_Music
      @RGE_Music Год назад +313

      I would consider relocating bro! Thats insanity to be stuck

    • @donaldlyons17
      @donaldlyons17 Год назад +279

      @@RGE_Music Depends on his job location and the type of job. Some people have jobs they have to go into other have job they don't.

    • @mkuc6951
      @mkuc6951 Год назад +86

      You're better off moving to Cambodia etc.

    • @rawgamehaney5525
      @rawgamehaney5525 Год назад +39

      @@mkuc6951 why cambodia. what about working their making money their?

    • @mkuc6951
      @mkuc6951 Год назад +126

      @@rawgamehaney5525 you can buy a block of land for 1/100th the cost (100 year lease) build for a low price and essentially have zero intervention of the government if you run a company.

  • @markfreeman4727
    @markfreeman4727 Год назад +2407

    the reason avocado toast became a thing is because its the only luxury food younger people can afford nowadays

    • @sko1beer
      @sko1beer Год назад +119

      The same thing has happened in Hong Kong the young have given up buying a home and spend the money buying a tesla

    • @azmendozafamily
      @azmendozafamily Год назад +67

      @@sko1beer Wow, they're buying an expensive liability? Crazy.

    • @azmendozafamily
      @azmendozafamily Год назад +81

      Are avocados a luxury? Or is it the toast? And why buy it instead of just making it at home? It all seems so wildly different to me. I'm a millennial, who barely got into my own home at the age of 40. Having been through challenging situations that kicked me in the teeth economically, and compared to my peers, I'm far behind.

    • @Headinavise
      @Headinavise Год назад +23

      Where I live avocados aren't expensive so I don't get the line. Boomers ?

    • @TheNewSchoolGamer
      @TheNewSchoolGamer Год назад +46

      I think it's more about how we're willing to spend $20-$25 on avocado toast at a brunch spot when you can make it at home for 1/20th the price 😅

  • @VenerableBede2510
    @VenerableBede2510 Год назад +3335

    I’m Gen X and I really get irritated at Boomers not realizing how the world is different now.

    • @voidalchemy_stratorusofficial
      @voidalchemy_stratorusofficial Год назад +565

      Yeah, I've seen so many shallow-minded comments from them.
      "Well, if you just work a little harder and get a part-time job on the weekends then you'll be able to save up and buy a house with cash in 3 years like I did back in 1973!"

    • @steveguillory7568
      @steveguillory7568 Год назад +70

      How about working for a company that pays for tuition (there are still plenty out there) and go to school at night. I’m a boomer and that’s what I did. There are things this younger generation can do besides playing the victim card

    • @TheRealbenjibits
      @TheRealbenjibits Год назад +103

      I’m a Gen Z and it is possible. Cash flow school in a worthwhile degree and keep your head down in work. Sacrifice to build generational wealth so your future does not have to struggle like you did.
      You have absurd amounts of knowledge around you. Take a break from tiktok and play the game of life.

    • @hypermetalsonic
      @hypermetalsonic Год назад +96

      Out of touch

    • @socalrefrigeration548
      @socalrefrigeration548 Год назад +71

      I don't listen to anyone who hasn't actually done it or isn't in the game.

  • @hera7884
    @hera7884 6 месяцев назад +701

    I can’t find a job anywhere. Everybody is hiring but nobody is hiring anyone on.

    • @HeadHunter697
      @HeadHunter697 6 месяцев назад +152

      Because most companies put up job postings without any intent to actually hire anyone for those positions, they don't actually need anyone for them, they just post them to make it look like business is booming to get more loan money.

    • @sndchamp9949
      @sndchamp9949 6 месяцев назад +24

      I know what you mean Took me 6 months and 20 months keep looking you’ll get there. They don’t want to hire anyone tbh

    • @eatmybutt42069
      @eatmybutt42069 6 месяцев назад

      everywhere is hiring trade jobs like welding, trucking, etc

    • @user-bw2fp1cp9w
      @user-bw2fp1cp9w 5 месяцев назад +8

      i had the same fear but in germany here i found a job so easy. Come to germany lol

    • @nicolehall694
      @nicolehall694 5 месяцев назад +36

      I honestly feel businesses are understaffing on purpose so they have an excuse to give poor service.

  • @cluelessinky
    @cluelessinky Год назад +3454

    As an old boomer I feel for todays kids. I grew in NYC during the 50s and went everywhere via public transport. Movies museums and concerts were always affordable. The crowds were civil and the only security to be aware of was not losing your ticket to the show. Now to go to any public event you have to be wary of everybody and everything. We boomers screwed up Please forgive us and do better
    Love and blessings to all

    • @melissachartres3219
      @melissachartres3219 Год назад +441

      Boomers were simply doing what they knew to do at the time during their prime. They (as a demographic) have proven themselves to be dedicated, loyal, hard workers. They happened to have been born into a time of plenty and simply took it for granted. The only thing that I see Boomers "doing wrong" is that they're unaware of the harsh realities of the world today. They're focused on how things were in the past and seem to avoid looking at how starkly things have changed. A lot of the hatred being directed at them is unwarranted. It's just a modified form of jealousy by other groups because Boomers had it good. They aren't to blame for that at all. They were and still are the wealthiest generation in history, though.

    • @steveguillory7568
      @steveguillory7568 Год назад +101

      @@melissachartres3219 great points you made. The country was actually less safe in the 80s and 90s. There simply is more media coverage now. And yes, Boomers are currently the wealthiest generation but let’s see if that holds true 50 years from now. It may hold true, we’ll see. One has to acknowledge that Boomers mentality was much more canted towards “live to work” than current generations. The current more balanced approach that Millennials and Gen Z subscribe to is likely much healthier and may make people happier…it may just not lead to the same level of economic attainment as others. That said, there are more revenue streams available now than ever.

    • @JRock3091
      @JRock3091 Год назад

      The Boomers are the people that fucked us, thank you for shipping off our manufacturering to China. And then, via government spending put us in debt before we were even born. Boomers couldn't live within there means and robbed the young of their futures while destroying the social contract as well.

    • @Network126
      @Network126 Год назад +185

      I'm 35, homeless, and drowning in debt and multiple car problems, despite working and not doing drugs.

    • @Mcudjoe34
      @Mcudjoe34 Год назад +35

      My dad remembers when CUNY schools were free. His freshman year was the first year they paid tuition 😅

  • @avoidtheloid
    @avoidtheloid Год назад +2051

    Something I thought about that I hardly see anyone mention with the generations as well:
    Companies used to hire new people and teach them the skills needed to perform the job they just got hired to do.
    Now in the modern era, people take on that debt themselves by attending college for said jobs.

    • @russelldoty2743
      @russelldoty2743 Год назад +420

      And then they don't count college as experience, but require so many years of experience for entry level jobs, tossing out every applicant that doesn't meet that requirement even if they have everything else needed.

    • @faye_isc
      @faye_isc Год назад +26

      exactly

    • @Excalibur2
      @Excalibur2 Год назад +196

      And then when you graduate they still aren't willing to train.

    • @TheThreatenedSwan
      @TheThreatenedSwan Год назад +14

      Genetic intelligence is declining, and it has been for over a century but the gains in nutrition papered this over somewhat.

    • @beanberg
      @beanberg Год назад +169

      It is crazy how that worked. I know many boomers who got a job with a totally unrelated degree if at all. Nowadays you wouldn’t even be considered if you don’t have the exact degree in that field. Even then, from personal experience, I apply and hear back from 1/100 companies on average. Somehow I’m the lazy one who doesn’t want to work

  • @mrnelsonius5631
    @mrnelsonius5631 Год назад +2140

    As an early millennial, the one trend I’ve noticed in my lifetime is a dramatic shift toward ordinary people no longer owning ANYTHING. We don’t own our music media, our film media, our devices. The housing market is the same phenomenon. A Renter economy only benefits the ruling corporate class. They have all the power, they can perpetually raise prices on what you already “have” because you’ve never actually had anything! Marx talked about the “means of production” but we’re transcending that into an almost feudal system. Sad thing is, it can only get worse because we’ve handed over all the economic power to a consolidated group of billionaires. Our governments are owned by the them with no easy way to claw that back.

    • @tigerbk
      @tigerbk Год назад +268

      You'll own nothing and be happy! Understood!!!?

    • @mrnelsonius5631
      @mrnelsonius5631 Год назад +213

      @@tigerbk “Well, I bought this iPhone so I can take it apart and repair it myself right?” NO, you’re licensing that phone and it’s inwards still belong to Apple. You can pay them to repair it, whatever they feel like charging you, or lease another one. Shits bonkers out here y’all

    • @midoevil7
      @midoevil7 Год назад +50

      ​@@mrnelsonius5631
      And they still buy it 🙄 ...

    • @tteqhu
      @tteqhu Год назад +19

      Digital media renting is highly inexpensive compared to physical disks, since there is expanded infrastructure.
      Support blu-ray releases if you want.
      And generally it's just people getting convenient with that. Streaming media is very popular, cinemas are not (convenience+cost, even if in home experience is worse).
      I have, however no idea what you mean with devices.
      Personally I don't own only physical devices related to ISP(router/decoder) / water, gas or electricity measuring/delievery related devices for obvious reasons.

    • @princecharming4708
      @princecharming4708 Год назад

      You will own nothing and be happy 😊 agenda 2030

  • @thevcountdown9824
    @thevcountdown9824 6 месяцев назад +64

    Im over 40, single, from Europe and have so many debts, its horrifying. Not because of the costs of life, but because of a disease who destroyed my life. I would have never imagined my life this way at this age. Life can change in weeks, always remember.

    • @colematthews7535
      @colematthews7535 Месяц назад +2

      That’s why saving every penny never made sense to me.

  • @chaoswitch1974
    @chaoswitch1974 Год назад +1140

    It's crazy to think how MUCH purchasing power boomers had. We always had a nice house and cars, but my mom always acted like we were poor. She spent a lot on herself, though.

    • @apersonontheinternet8006
      @apersonontheinternet8006 Год назад +46

      No, you see, you act like because you had nice things that money was just growing on trees. The way your comment is written makes me think that mommy said no to you a few times and now you are all salty because you had to earn your own money to do your own things.

    • @jamariiion
      @jamariiion Год назад

      @@apersonontheinternet8006 bro stfu

    • @TheThreatenedSwan
      @TheThreatenedSwan Год назад +22

      Not true at all. People were poorer. Houses were smaller. The social environment was that much better, but millennials _want_ the things that shred social capital

    • @prodyung829
      @prodyung829 Год назад

      @@apersonontheinternet8006 lol you didn't read at all your just like all the other boomers🤣🤡 he said
      it's not that he doesn't want to work it's that most people in gen Z are statistically paid less then ever did any generation in history if you compare it to home-buying he's not complaining he's pulling out statistics on why it's virtually unrealistic now. You don't read.

    • @prodyung829
      @prodyung829 Год назад +122

      @@TheThreatenedSwan poorer compared to TODAYS standards. that's like me comparing 1930 to 2030 of course life is better now BUT YOU HAVE TO WORK harder for the same BUYING POWER as the older Generations. Statistically speaking we do have it harder though. You probably think it was harder back in the days just probably cuz of the Great Depression when statistically speaking coven made the economy worse than the Great Depression was EVER.

  • @michaelmeathammer5688
    @michaelmeathammer5688 Год назад +973

    Dad was a welder. Mom was an engineer. Neither had degrees. They were learned on the job. They were able to raise a family and build 2 homes and have a second home for vacation. They always bought new cars every 7-8 years and we’re able to save for my college and their own sizable retirement. They never had money issues. My mother was a great money manager.
    Here I am today. 2 degrees making a very good salary with my wife having no degree making a mediocre salary. We can barely afford one child a home and paltry retirement savings. My parents are always asking me when I’m going to fix my fence or build a nice detached garage or go travel with them. The money isn’t there. Households need to make 200k to live what was once the attainable middle class lifestyle. I’m in the Midwest.

    • @themodernotaku
      @themodernotaku Год назад +71

      An engineer… without a degree?

    • @michaelmeathammer5688
      @michaelmeathammer5688 Год назад +204

      @@themodernotaku yeah. 1987. Times were different

    • @addertooth1
      @addertooth1 Год назад

      @@themodernotaku Very common. I am one as well. I work with others who also work in engineering with no degree. Most got their foot in the door as a "technician" and studied at home during the night to gain skills. After years on the job, and competent work, they get moved into an engineering position. You have to be smart and diligent at self-study to achieve this. Until you gain the full set of skills, your life is 12 hour days (8 hours working, 4 hours studying at home). All the knowledge you need are found in college books (found at a major discount in used book stores). That, and today on the Internet.
      For the young today, I suggest a different path of self study (and certificates) in Cybersecurity or Cloud. Both of those areas are HOT, and employers will snatch you up with 2 or 3 Comptia certificates under your belt. Both Amazon (AWS) and Microsoft (Azure) offer FREE coursework towards their Cloud certifications. You can get your foot in the door for Cybersecurity with just two certs from Comptia (Network+ and Security+). All of these jobs are a "position of trust" and require a clean background check.

    • @Cent-130
      @Cent-130 Год назад +6

      True

    • @thepspman116
      @thepspman116 Год назад +20

      Shoulda followed your dads footsteps, welders make bank if they operate their own business.

  • @gandrew5363
    @gandrew5363 Год назад +951

    To ask if we have it harder than boomers is overwhelmingly understated… I think I speak for a lot, and I mean A LOT, of people in my generation, but we’re tired, broke, overworked, underpaid, under appreciated, depression, hopeless and all we do is get blamed for everything. So yeah, I would say we have it much worse - and it’ll continue until later generations starting retiring or passing away. Greed, money for that matter, really is the root of all evil. You sabotage a whole generation of people and emancipate yourself, then blame an already broken generation for your woes.

    • @kls701
      @kls701 Год назад +46

      You said it best. I exactly !

    • @8ofwands300
      @8ofwands300 Год назад +9

      Wait a.minute. Who's blaming what generation for their woes?

    • @squidvis
      @squidvis Год назад +119

      ​@@8ofwands300 Boomers blaming millennials and gen z. Reading comp must've not been your best subject...

    • @8ofwands300
      @8ofwands300 Год назад +16

      @@squidvis Um. Isn t this whole comment section and video devoted to how Boomers had it good and they're to blame for all your woes? 😕😕. But okay kid...whatever. Love the ad hominem, btw! 😉

    • @TheThreatenedSwan
      @TheThreatenedSwan Год назад +19

      You have no right to complain unless you're more conservative than boomers. Even the native population of millennials is that much less intelligent. People balk at this because genetics is taboo, but if you had a population of horses and every generation the more brown horses had more offspring, you would not be surprised at the herd getting browner. You could blame boomers somewhat for the cultural environment becoming so bad, but technology is mostly to blame, and millennials don't view it as a problem. The exact things causing all the problems to American society are what millennials want more of.

  • @Kittysohigh283
    @Kittysohigh283 2 месяца назад +14

    And they wonder why we don’t have kids. We can barely afford to take care of ourselves.

  • @Donut-sw9ud
    @Donut-sw9ud Год назад +382

    we are poorer and poorer but the ones who do make good money are getting richer and richer in our generation.

    • @yeh.80
      @yeh.80 Год назад +28

      ​@RetroGrader yes and no. Rich get richer because they're smart with money, doesn't mean it easy. If it was then every lottery winner ever would never go broke..

    • @la6136
      @la6136 Год назад +31

      They say that making your first million is the hardest and then after that it becomes much easier to maintain wealth.

    • @yeh.80
      @yeh.80 Год назад +4

      @RetroGrader no, not really. If you look at the statistics majority of wealth is lost by I think the third generation, but don't quote me on that. So no, just because you're born rich doesn't mean you'll stay rich. Again, my point still stands, rich people are rich because they understand money and the broader economy, coupled with a hard work ethic. So yes, for them it is easy to maintain and grow wealth, because that's their passion.

    • @NoirMorter
      @NoirMorter Год назад +5

      @RetroGrader True starting from debt when you make so little the system is against you. But it's possible with hard work, smart spending, and support (family, spouse, friend.) Basically live with your family to save on rent, pay off debts would be a good start.

    • @bungh0LeO
      @bungh0LeO Год назад +5

      It's more like this poor mindset will keep you poor. If you are poor but work hard in an industry that you genuinely enjoy and that brings value to the economy, you'll no longer be poor. There are many instances here in America where a person didn't have more than Bob, Sally, or Joe, but had a better work ethic coupled with smarter spending habits and ended up being able to get themselves and their families in a more comfortable quality of living for the present and the future.

  • @juanpablorobayo9891
    @juanpablorobayo9891 Год назад +709

    I just want to be happy, man. Life doesn't need to be a walk in the park but people act like we have it so much easier when EVERYTHING literally points to the contrary. It feels like I'm being constantly gaslit.

    • @practicaliching2311
      @practicaliching2311 Год назад

      It's because Democrats use high taxes, open immigration, and over regulation to put slack into the labor market. Which lowers wages at the bottom and drives up housing prices at the same time. To the point tens of millions of people don't have any money left over at the end of the month. And it's the low wages at the bottom that allows the excesses at the top, causing the wealth gap.
      It a deliberate policy because Democrats need a permanent underclass of unemployed and underemployed to be dependent on government so they will keep voting Democrat to get handouts.
      Same reason Democrats pushed banks to make zero down loans to minorities at the top of the housing bubble. To drive them into poverty.
      Same reason Democrats give easy access to student loans. Because they know only 40 percent of black students graduated from four year bachelor degree programs within six years. And only 64 percent of white students. They know the debt without the degree would drive them into poverty.
      Every single thing the Democrats do is designed to create an underclass of poor people.

    • @WildLifePrime
      @WildLifePrime Год назад +108

      You are

    • @DarkMustard1337
      @DarkMustard1337 Год назад +26

      First world serfdom is still serfdom in spirit.

    • @evettegarcia4804
      @evettegarcia4804 Год назад +10

      We do have it easier , we are 1st world country , COMPARED to third world countries …. So yes we have life easier

    • @legobobafett5045
      @legobobafett5045 Год назад +1

      Happy?
      Kellogg from Fallout 4 has a quote for you! 😉

  • @Nar419
    @Nar419 Год назад +1886

    As a married gen z who got married at 22 my husband and I have no children we both work full time, earn just as much as my father did and yet we still can’t afford even half of what he has. I’m still wearing clothes from 7th grade and I was able to buy socks for myself last month had to dip into the savings a bit to do it but I needed them. We earn 80k a year and with all the costs of our area having the down payment for a home the size of what I grew up in would take us about 10 years. We just don’t earn enough to keep up with anything and frankly I don’t care anymore. Just gonna wait for my father to die of old age and take what he leaves behind. Boomers had it way easier and the gas lighting they constantly Do with the work harder BS just makes me angry.

    • @blackagent4754
      @blackagent4754 Год назад +136

      Bruh I'm the same age and still looking for marriage and can't find anyone else where I live that wants to. How did y'all do it? I need pro tips.

    • @chino1603
      @chino1603 Год назад

      Who says he’s going to die before you ? I hope he outlives you

    • @PabloGonzalez-uf1qf
      @PabloGonzalez-uf1qf Год назад +153

      That is why during Covid-19. They expected the older generation to die in huge numbers that is why they called, “The Transfer of Wealth”.

    • @MRkriegs
      @MRkriegs Год назад +117

      Relying on an inheritance 😂😂😂

    • @Peter-uo9km
      @Peter-uo9km Год назад +192

      I don't think they are gaslighting you.... they are perhaps naive and think the world hasn't changed from their times. My mother retracted her statement and said yea it's a little harder now.

  • @alisonb9963
    @alisonb9963 7 месяцев назад +268

    Multi generational households were common during the depression. When times get tough you have to live with family sometimes.

    • @lazerrhino
      @lazerrhino 7 месяцев назад +43

      You're right but baby boomers didn't go through the depression

    • @RoyceMusic333
      @RoyceMusic333 7 месяцев назад +2

      Amen, true family help.

    • @NatblidaAscende
      @NatblidaAscende 7 месяцев назад +21

      And for those people who don't have that option? I guess go buy a tent eh? Lol

    • @alisonb9963
      @alisonb9963 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@NatblidaAscende You may have to move to a more affordable area/state/country and/or get roomates to share the costs. When the going gets tough, the tough get going. The Great Depression was way worse than it is today and those people made it through. We will too. It's the way of the world. There will always be poverty, it's the choices we make and where we go to lessen the burden that matters.

    • @alisonb9963
      @alisonb9963 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@NatblidaAscende By serving your country in the military, you get pay, food, housing and health care as well as a skill and, of course, honor. That may be a choice for people who don't accept their situation but rather roll up their sleeves and strive to better it.

  • @avirei98
    @avirei98 Год назад +587

    We are literally just trying to escape the reality that we live in because it's not pleasant. The online world has given us an escape and for a lot of people it is the only thing keeping them sane

    • @grandpulse7970
      @grandpulse7970 Год назад +34

      Real

    • @solomoncumquats776
      @solomoncumquats776 Год назад +17

      That's why VrChat is great
      I can't wait for my Metal Gear Rising, Ready Player 1 future

    • @RvnntSoc
      @RvnntSoc Год назад +5

      Online is the only way a lot of people make any money.

    • @solomoncumquats776
      @solomoncumquats776 Год назад +2

      @@letupandridemarkdangelo170 it's just another challenge, like millions that have faced the human race before.
      I'm sure we'll be fine, we are still here after all.

    • @Kygaahh
      @Kygaahh Год назад

      ….. 👀

  • @chanela.7786
    @chanela.7786 Год назад +790

    Im 23, graduated college last year with my B.A. and the amount of jobs I’ve seen that actually want you to have a degree and experience do not pay anywhere near the work they ask of you. I’ve seen postings of jobs paying less than $18 an hour wanting 10 years of experience and positions that even want you to work voluntarily(aka free) for a period of time before actually paying you an hourly wage, it’s sad and crazy how jobs just don’t pay enough to afford for people to live.

    • @MrArtVein
      @MrArtVein Год назад +52

      This. You can make $4 more per hour in a warehouse pulling orders. Think about that. Do yourself a favor and figure out what you're good at fast and create your own company. Only thing you need to learn really is taxes. Then go to town. Forget everything else. I'll save you the heartache I went through

    • @prodyung829
      @prodyung829 Год назад +87

      @@MrArtVein dude I work in those warehouses. Overtime is really hard to get nowadays. You can't really live off of $20 an hour 40 hours a week it doesn't make sense.

    • @thesayled599
      @thesayled599 Год назад +125

      then they post those job listings and wonder why nobody applies or can apply and they blame it on "oh, damn kids dont want to work these days"

    • @superdave8248
      @superdave8248 Год назад +49

      Working for free is called internships. Usually done in the finance, legal, and fashion industries. The idea being you work for six to twelve months to get the ropes. In this day and age I wish internships were illegal. You simply can't work in a major city in a major institution within a given high profile industry and not get a reasonable income for your work. And if the internship goes badly, you probably shooting yourself in the foot in that career choice.

    • @bobsacamano7653
      @bobsacamano7653 Год назад +9

      greed

  • @aknorth1053
    @aknorth1053 Год назад +596

    What crazy is that it used to be a family could get by with one income, unless your a very high earner there is no way that is happening now

    • @helena3631
      @helena3631 Год назад +40

      You can it’s just that folks have a spending problem.. a few people I know make well over 100k about 200k and they live check to check they always on vacation,have designer ,car loan etc it’s a consumerist society .. you do not need to be a millionaire to have a stay at home mom you can make 120k even 100k and live fine.. studies show the more people earn the more they spend and most married people do not have an emergency fund more money is not the issue it’s money management and not keeping up with the Jones’s

    • @azmendozafamily
      @azmendozafamily Год назад +66

      When women were brought into the workplace, it drove the labor pool up, lowering labor prices. So households that could have single earners, needed double earners.

    • @Pistolita221
      @Pistolita221 Год назад

      ​@@helena3631 according to the 2019 data the median income is 31k, did you think 120k is like... a normal income? That's HIGH income, lmao are you a boomer or just a spoiled snot??

    • @4tonmike
      @4tonmike Год назад +17

      In Romania I'm told it's natural for both people in marriage to be working. The guy told me that a family subsisting on a single average income was only possible in a country that had won a world war and wasn't bombed into the ground.
      Historically speaking, for most of human history, a vast majority of families, had to get by on less than a dollar a day in today's money. The 1900s was only 123 years ago.

    • @sew_gal7340
      @sew_gal7340 Год назад +17

      Back in those days women were encouraged to stay at home. Feminism has pushed women in to the work force so it makes sense everything is more expensive now to compensate for inflation

  • @MrEOM41
    @MrEOM41 7 месяцев назад +8

    You can’t just have a full time job nowadays, you gotta door dash, Uber eats, start a business on the side this economy sucks 😅

  • @skiidzman
    @skiidzman Год назад +387

    I'm 32, my favorite comment from people my dads age is "i paid off my student loans, interest and all, they don't deserve any help!" well Dad, your loans were like $5000 tops. How's 65k - 100k look to ya?

    • @strtupj882
      @strtupj882 Год назад +11

      Why would you take out that much money for college, unless you’re getting an MBA

    • @colinjohnson6454
      @colinjohnson6454 Год назад +45

      ​@ippos_khloros I think it's the pushing of the "college experience". People are convinced that they have to go to a big out of state school for a communications degree. We need to push for more community colleges for more standard degrees. Nothing wrong with community colleges. I wish I did that and saved some money.

    • @iceman5117
      @iceman5117 Год назад +5

      @@strtupj882 because it's the difference between 30k a year and 60k a year with some benefits.

    • @LegDayLas
      @LegDayLas Год назад +9

      Well your dad is right, don't take out loans you can't reasonably expect to pay for.

    • @someone-ji2zb
      @someone-ji2zb Год назад +24

      I am 35, and my parents only recently started to realize how bad things have truly gotten. They grew up during a time where a janitor or masonry worker could afford a home in 10 years of saving.... those jobs don't even let you live alone on a single income in most of the country anymore, nor do most other lines of work.
      It is no longer the era of "working hard secures you future", you now need to specifically have certain skills to make it work, and not everyone is inclined to those particular things. As it has always been. So many men my age have no kids, no prospect for families, and so many in our family were hoping for grandchildren and it seems like that ship is sailing away for many people lol.... can't rightly afford a family if I can barely survive myself.

  • @billnye69
    @billnye69 Год назад +484

    My Grandfather - Salary $4000 a year 1 job. Bought his house for $5000 dollars.
    My Father - Salary $70k a year 1 job. Bought his house for 75K
    Me - 50k-60k a year from my 3 jobs doing 50+hrs a week.......Cost of a house that I don't own $700k
    Also me - Gets told I'm lazy and don't work hard enough.

    • @khaosleigon504
      @khaosleigon504 Год назад +48

      That sounds about right smh shit crazy man

    • @maplenook
      @maplenook Год назад +7

      Bad timing

    • @mr_movieguru
      @mr_movieguru Год назад +95

      Boomers had an easy life. Got rich and stayed rich by making others more poor.

    • @luiscardenas8510
      @luiscardenas8510 11 месяцев назад +8

      It is your fault, get one job that pays 150K a year, learn a usefull skill, man up.....

    • @khaosleigon504
      @khaosleigon504 11 месяцев назад +80

      @@luiscardenas8510 lmao 🤣🤣🤣 you must be a boomer with a reply like that

  • @327Federal
    @327Federal Год назад +484

    The cost of living was 50% Less in decades past. It is completely unaffordable to save anything beyond basic necessities.

    • @humphrey
      @humphrey  Год назад +51

      word

    • @Zombiebeast1995
      @Zombiebeast1995 Год назад +47

      The standard of living is much higher now. Houses are bigger, we have more tech. Etc. all of which adds to cost. People could buy smaller houses. My wife and I make about $90,000 a year together(for the past 2years, before that we made ~$20k-50k and we live just fine, we save for retirement at 15% right now (hopefully can get that to 20-25% in the next couple years), can take a decent vacation about 1 time a year, and own a home at about 27% of our monthly income (we also put down over 25%). House is worth about $400k and we took a $285k mortgage. And we are 28… I will say we’ve been together since 17 years old and have worked diligently and with some wisdom to accomplish all this.

    • @entertheabzu
      @entertheabzu Год назад +60

      @@Zombiebeast1995 good for you, glad to see a success story. But in places like Canada, average shithole homes cost approximately 600,000. In the middle of nowhere you can get it for less, but this is only cheaper if you have a remote job or are a plumber or electrician because there’s absolutely no work in these towns or cities.

    • @Zombiebeast1995
      @Zombiebeast1995 Год назад +5

      I’ll only speak for the US because I know it is easily possible here to get ahead and become a millionaire, without even making a ton of money.

    • @jonboyfutch8081
      @jonboyfutch8081 Год назад +1

      Whats you phone and company try mint mobile

  • @macandcheese7632
    @macandcheese7632 7 месяцев назад +60

    I hopped jobs with that exact strategy and I can say that it works for a while but you hit a brick wall. Companies see exactly what you’re doing and they might decide they don’t want to be used as another rung on your ladder. You also might get stuck working at a place you don’t particularly like. Proceed with caution if you decide to do this and good luck.

  • @mirrormirror444
    @mirrormirror444 Год назад +972

    I remember my sociology professor said 1950’s being the most financially advantageous time period for opportunities and financial growth and the worst was between 2008 and now, and it’s only getting worse.
    My grandparents bought three houses in Santa Barbara, CA in the 1950’s, he was a barber who retired at 30 due to muscular dystrophy and she was a part time teacher’s aide. The American dream is dead for average family.

    • @SingleCHIDLESSHappyMovement
      @SingleCHIDLESSHappyMovement Год назад +61

      This is why I promote young people NOT to get PREGNANT or MARRIED as expenses go up 100 to 1000 fold over a lifetime. Ask any married or parent who is the brutally honest type who dont romanticize things or leave out facts.

    • @WhiteWolfos
      @WhiteWolfos Год назад +19

      @@SingleCHIDLESSHappyMovement I see it in the perspective of my poor grandparents who lived in a stucko house built by their bare hands and had 11 children. It gives me the lens to understand why people in 3rd world countries have so many children and still live pretty happy despite some hardships. We have it really easy in comparison.

    • @drew8235
      @drew8235 Год назад +55

      Imagine being a barber or a teacher's aide now and affording literally anything. Even if you both of those jobs on your own, you'd barely be able to afford to live.

    • @britjj5126
      @britjj5126 Год назад +17

      ​@@SingleCHIDLESSHappyMovementUnfortunately this is not a healthy mindset. Humans have a hierarchy of needs and for many this encompasses marriage and kids. You need balance. ie encouraging family planning. Having children you can afford to take care of.

    • @SingleCHIDLESSHappyMovement
      @SingleCHIDLESSHappyMovement Год назад +45

      @@britjj5126 I would say it is unhealthier and selfish to want to bring children into poverty and the economic collapse we are entering. We all have needs but in life we have to put others at a minimum level of priority as they are humans, most importantly a person's own flesh and blood (children who would be born if a person doesnt care what the situation is and still decides to get pregnant or get someone else pregnant).

  • @LC-wv7tz
    @LC-wv7tz Год назад +562

    I'm a millenial. No student debt. I worked ~30 hours per week all through college. I also didn't start at college until I was 22, I spent 4 years working and saving everything I could before I started.
    Since I was poor, I qualified for pell grants and I had a small scholarship of $500 per semester from the state since I started a 2 year Community College and transferred to the closest 4 year school in the area. Closest so I didn't have to move to a city with higher prices. I commuted to campus for class and worked nights and weekends the entire time.
    No college, I did it. But at what cost? Between the early years spent working and the the years in the degree working and studying it took me 9 years to do what other people do in 4 years.
    Still, I'm better off than most people my age, I guess. I have no college debt, no auto loan, and bought a house. All my needs are comfortable met and I can save a little bit.
    I made it, so what? It is doable, but the reduction in standards of living is insane. I work as engineer. I do decently. However, if I had simply been born 30-40 years earlier and lived the same frugal and disciplined lifestyle, my job and income would have purchased a home twice the size. I have a modest 1100 square foot home that is 60 years old in a rural community. My income is just enoughto pay my mortgage and utilities and give me cushion for emergencies. I don't travel or take trips. I've never been on a plane in my life. I "eat out" just 2 or 3 times per month.
    My father and grandfather worked similar engineering jobs (my own father with only a 2 year degree). They afforded a house 50 years newer, twice the size, supported a wife and 3 kids, cars for people. I'm unmarried still. No way I could support a family of 3 in a large 2500 sqft middle class home with what I do. And I'm doing better than virtually everyone I know, save for the white collar zoomers and millenials I work with who were already rich and had their degrees payed for them and jobs handed to them through nepotism. No one else in my job area came from a working class background and broke through into white collar work. They came from wealthy families already.

    • @rev8419
      @rev8419 Год назад +31

      100,000 people just walked into your country in the last month

    • @kls701
      @kls701 Год назад +60

      @@rev8419 ok so what? That doesn’t negate anything from his experience.

    • @CordeliaWagner
      @CordeliaWagner Год назад

      I am 22 and I see no value in buying a house and marriage. You just feed the banks and are glued to another person by a government contract.

    • @Network126
      @Network126 Год назад +38

      I'm 35, homeless, and drowning in debt and multiple car problems, despite working and not doing drugs.

    • @mattb58478
      @mattb58478 Год назад +25

      This was a really good post, thanks for sharing your experience. I don’t really have anything to add to your post, but I think this is a harsh reality that we are facing, where all of the points you mentioned are only getting worse. It stinks to even think that we have to delay getting married and having kids because we aren’t at a place financially to do so.

  • @sethmeek941
    @sethmeek941 Год назад +351

    That job switching thing is true and ridiculous. It shows that companies aren't looking for loyalty but just someone to fill in a gap and pay at a minimal amount based on their work history.

    • @xejelah
      @xejelah Год назад

      They're trying to automate everything now to get rid of jobs. I was shocked in some parts of the US they're bringing back child labor and paying them in peanuts - it's like the 1900's all over again.

    • @midoevil7
      @midoevil7 Год назад +6

      Loyalty don't make money,
      Not for the employer, nor the employee ...

    • @dianaverano7878
      @dianaverano7878 Год назад +8

      Because company lays off unlike in my parents generation

    • @ordinaryhuman5645
      @ordinaryhuman5645 Год назад +3

      It's also selection bias. Who switches jobs to earn a lower wage? Nobody. Of course people switching are going to be earning more money along the way. The people with good income growth and worse prospects at a different company are going to stay where they are.

    • @machspeed8153
      @machspeed8153 10 месяцев назад

      I have worked for the same company 5.5 years their absolute guru for their multi-brand luxury products selling 100 million per year. They choose to pay parenting managers/cashiers way more to talk to me like a child. Soon as I get the home they will act as though it is a ball and chain for them to keep me just like when I began renting. Showing commitment gives them power for mistreatment today.

  • @jager9825
    @jager9825 6 месяцев назад +13

    I think one of the biggest issues in our early educational system is the push for college and not trade schools. I live in oregon and was always told to go to college, trade schools weren't even brought into the equation. There are many trade jobs that make very good money and are in constant demand. Take a look at becoming a hygienist. The make at least 50 an hour and its a 2 year program. We got to start offering trade schools as an option. College isn't for everyone.

  • @savagesweetheart90
    @savagesweetheart90 Год назад +424

    Whenever I feel stressed, anxious about not being able to afford a house, a month's worth of groceries, rent going up, bills, etc I always say to myself, "Thank God I don't have or want children."

    • @nuance9000
      @nuance9000 Год назад +10

      Children will just make you disassociate debt with life. Why define our lives by the amount of debt load we can handle?

    • @savagesweetheart90
      @savagesweetheart90 Год назад +45

      @@nuance9000 thank you for thinking you know me more than I know myself.
      🖖

    • @TheMetalwolf77777
      @TheMetalwolf77777 Год назад +77

      I totally get that vibe, I often think I would like to have children but I can't afford it I can barely afford myself

    • @practicaliching2311
      @practicaliching2311 Год назад

      It's because Democrats use high taxes, open immigration, and over regulation to put slack into the labor market. Which lowers wages at the bottom and drives up housing prices at the same time. To the point tens of millions of people don't have any money left over at the end of the month. And it's the low wages at the bottom that allows the excesses at the top, causing the wealth gap.
      It a deliberate policy because Democrats need a permanent underclass of unemployed and underemployed to be dependent on government so they will keep voting Democrat to get handouts.
      Same reason Democrats pushed banks to make zero down loans to minorities at the top of the housing bubble. To drive them into poverty.
      Same reason Democrats give easy access to student loans. Because they know only 40 percent of black students graduated from four year bachelor degree programs within six years. And only 64 percent of white students. They know the debt without the degree would drive them into poverty.
      Every single thing the Democrats do is designed to create an underclass of poor people.

    • @Everythingz127
      @Everythingz127 Год назад +44

      This is why Japan's population is dying, I mean they get little pay but they are expected to have kids ? I'm sorry but no. I'm not having kids if I can't make at least 80k a year by MYSELF. I'm 17, and I'm sure prices and life will become more expensive that's why I'm setting it high. I need to be in a good state to even think about having kids first right ? I know for sure, a child can never be happier than their caretakers

  • @tater8803
    @tater8803 Год назад +145

    I worked at a crappy job with low pay for 2.5 years. All my coworkers would work a month or two then find something else and I just kept hoping to make more than $10.25. It’s crazy that if you’re good at your job and are loyal, you’re punished nowadays

    • @dm-jf5uu
      @dm-jf5uu Год назад +38

      Don't be loyal it doesn't pay off nowdays new people that come in will make more money with no experience

    • @princessmarlena1359
      @princessmarlena1359 Год назад +11

      I worked crappy low paying jobs such as that, never stayed more than three years.

    • @jessedavis5992
      @jessedavis5992 Год назад +12

      Unless you hit the jackpot and find a small business with real humans running it, never be loyal to an employer. And never go above and beyond, you wont be compensated for it and it will be expected of you from then on

    • @Matanumi
      @Matanumi 6 месяцев назад

      go union. skill up, find skills that are tough that no one else can do. then move jobs make more money

    • @serily4524
      @serily4524 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@Matanumisaying up this that wont solve anything

  • @mr.boostang2064
    @mr.boostang2064 Год назад +285

    $1,250 rent for a 50k income 🥹
    As a realtor in miami, I'm seeing people lease 2,200/m with 50k incomes. A 1,250 rental is literally just a shed or a room.

    • @donaldlyons17
      @donaldlyons17 Год назад +13

      Sounds the same as an apartment!!

    • @manaoa.
      @manaoa. Год назад +29

      Earning less than $2k but paying over $1500 for rent. Where is rent $1,200, I need to move there.

    • @mr.boostang2064
      @mr.boostang2064 Год назад +14

      @Manao A. trust me you don't want it, unless you're ok living in a small room and sharing the same bathroom with 4 other people

    • @donaldlyons17
      @donaldlyons17 Год назад +6

      @@mr.boostang2064 Unless one makes a ton of money what other options does one have?

    • @mr.boostang2064
      @mr.boostang2064 Год назад +18

      @donaldlyons17 not mocking the low-income, just stating how unrealistic that 3-4 times the income for rent is. The average 2bed in miami goes for 2,000/month. That means a young couple or single parent needs to make in excess of $6k-$8k a month to live comfortably. That's roughly a 85k-120k household income. Most of the tenants that need these units make an average of 40k-60k

  • @etaokha4164
    @etaokha4164 6 месяцев назад +64

    Growing up my mother never helped me with money or taught me how to use money because shes a boomer and selfish when it came to money. I am a millennial and worked harder than my mother to try and put a roof over my children heads. Mind you my mother had the money to help us but rather took her money and gave it to the people she taught needed her help other than helping her children or grandchildren children. My mother was never part of my life growing up and its 5yrs no contact. I still made it in life without her help or her. She has no relationship with me nor her grandchildren and she has lost everything and its her fault because baby boomers are the most selfish generation youll ever come across. Its their way or no way.

    • @richardneal5196
      @richardneal5196 4 месяца назад +13

      Boomer here. I paid for my millennial daughter's house and subsequent refurbishment, gave her her first and second cars. Even now I give her money occasionally, even though my income on a pension is less than what she earns. I don't consider myself to be selfish, so please don't try grouping everyone under one banner.
      EDIT: she did give me the first car back when I gave her the second one (the latter of which she still uses). Also even though her income is higher than mine now, my savings outrank hers.
      It's a shame that you received no help.

    • @user-nz3rv2ov2m
      @user-nz3rv2ov2m 4 месяца назад

      "baby boomers are the most selfish generation youll ever come across"........Says the person whose entire generation expects everything to be handed to them.

    • @stephensamuel4674
      @stephensamuel4674 4 месяца назад

      @@richardneal5196 shut up BOOMER

    • @BillKurn
      @BillKurn 3 месяца назад +4

      Boomer here. When I'm gone, my daughter will inherit my wealth and property despite now having built her own.

    • @mocheen4837
      @mocheen4837 Месяц назад +1

      I grew up poor and my father left us and took everything. I lived in a shelter for a little while before my grandparents took us in. My father remarried, never spoke to us or paid alimony or child support. He passed away and did not leave us a penny. Everything went to his new family. I started teaching my kids about finance since they were 5. When they were in high school they worked and started their Roth IRAs. Both entered college with over $20,000 saved. I paid for their college and bought them both cars at age 15. I do not believe that they have ever gone without any necessities. They were always provided for to the best of our abilities. When we are gone they will receive all of our estate. Growing up poor and working hard to get ahead was a very difficult road. People come to this country with Pennie’s in their pocket and become millionaires. This is the land of opportunity. Nobody said it was an easy road.

  • @griscamacho1
    @griscamacho1 Год назад +174

    That's the thing, sacrificed so much for the degree and now it's not paying. It's a hard mental decision to leave and start at a retail or other department.

    • @ca8824
      @ca8824 Год назад +8

      What degree do you have? Whatever it is don’t do retail. Look for businesses that just want grads w degrees for like an entry analyst or ops role, network, and interview prep.

    • @TheRealbenjibits
      @TheRealbenjibits Год назад +16

      degrees do not work unless it’s engineering or another science field.

    • @donaldlyons17
      @donaldlyons17 Год назад +6

      @@TheRealbenjibits depends on employeer. I know my teacher said some employeers offer interviews depending on where you went to school and how your outcomes were. For example I got a interview offer because I passed a certain test and in that company everyone who passes a similar test always gets an interview.

    • @socalrefrigeration548
      @socalrefrigeration548 Год назад

      Someone needs to fold my clothes.

    • @donaldlyons17
      @donaldlyons17 Год назад +3

      @@socalrefrigeration548 yeah but there would need to be enough need to make money

  • @trexasaurus5322
    @trexasaurus5322 Год назад +357

    The issue is a lot of commodities are being bought as investments by massive corporations, especially housing. The median income has stayed pretty much the same relative to inflation. We need to stop large investment groups from buying out literally everything you need to live

    • @Dbb27
      @Dbb27 Год назад +2

      Actually their acquisitions are way down. Rents are getting softer and the appreciation rate is back down to normal of 4-6% a year in most of the country. Many new builds coming up as well. We were 500k starts short since 2012 after the crash.

    • @Cupofgo
      @Cupofgo Год назад +1

      Absolutely! Thank you!

    • @BFVsnypEz
      @BFVsnypEz Год назад +37

      Black rock and vanguard are using your 401k money to price you out of your own home.

    • @InternetMameluq
      @InternetMameluq Год назад +16

      Lol you wish. No, the problem is they're buying neccesary goods that you need to survive, like medicine, housing, and infrastructure. It's called rent seeking.

    • @darkstrifequeen1458
      @darkstrifequeen1458 10 месяцев назад +4

      Doesn’t it make you wonder what’s the point of living if it’s so freaking expensive these days?

  • @ElladanKenet
    @ElladanKenet Год назад +360

    It's worth remembering that quite a few in the Boomer generation (and older) were running on single incomes and STILL doing well. Single income families with stay-at-home moms was quite common. Since the 90s, multi-income families has become far more common, practically necessary in most cases. It's reflected in home and rent costs: working minimum wage, you'd need 2, maybe even 3 incomes for rent in most cities.

    • @xejelah
      @xejelah Год назад +3

      Move out of the city. You might actually be able to afford a living on a lower income job in a place where the prices are far cheaper.

    • @Maelstromme
      @Maelstromme Год назад +36

      @@xejelah Less jobs. No social life in suburbs. Still expensive in most cases.

    • @strawberry641
      @strawberry641 Год назад +5

      ​@xejelah and if you're disabled and cant drive due to it? then what?
      i was able to find a job i could work when i lived in a city for about a year and a half, was independent and able to get around on my own thanks to public transit.
      now that im back to living with my parents in suburbia, i have to rely on them or my sister to drive me around and they all work, so i have to get a job within walking distance. No one is getting back to me for an interview and I am extremely limited in my options now.
      What else am I supposed to do?

    • @smtmonke
      @smtmonke Год назад +8

      ​@@xejelahHeheh yeah, 2 bed 1 bath at 1250 a month, totally affordable at minimum wage. It's a shitty position to be in, the whole entire system is rigged to make the young man pay for the older man's games.

    • @InternetMameluq
      @InternetMameluq Год назад +10

      @@xejelah Rent is less in those places because wages are lower. You can't move into the country and get a better deal, it's basic economics.

  • @neveser
    @neveser 7 месяцев назад +17

    Companies just don't value work anymore.

    • @aviyahcrow6617
      @aviyahcrow6617 15 дней назад

      Esp when our govt brings in HB1 visas to take ANY "Good" jobs we have!!😂

    • @MatthewConnellan-xc3oj
      @MatthewConnellan-xc3oj 6 дней назад

      Then just don’t work, make code to do your job for you, and get free money.

  • @yuriysemenikhin302
    @yuriysemenikhin302 Год назад +353

    There is a very important part missing from this analysis.
    The way that a Household Income was achieved is VERY!!! Important!
    All the way to 1990 the majority of household income was achieved through a Single Wage. And this the whole difference.

    • @mikezerker6925
      @mikezerker6925 Год назад +6

      My parents both worked in the 80s… In fact my Dad started off with 3 jobs, then cut to 2 then 1 - when he became a manager and earned more. My Mom started with a part-time job in the evenings (so that she was home with us during the day) then started a full time job when we grew a bit older.

    • @yuriysemenikhin302
      @yuriysemenikhin302 Год назад +23

      @@mikezerker6925 I didn't say ALL 🙂

    • @Lem0nsquid
      @Lem0nsquid Год назад +41

      We doubled the supply of workers, but the demand didn’t increase with it. Wages were halved for all

    • @mikezerker6925
      @mikezerker6925 Год назад +7

      @@yuriysemenikhin302 most of my friend’s had parents where both worked FT in the 80s and 90s… 2 parent income was commonplace.

    • @yuriysemenikhin302
      @yuriysemenikhin302 Год назад +10

      @@mikezerker6925 Put a like on your answer 🙂
      Over the space of the 80's, depending on the area you lived in, women's "right to work" has generally turned into an "Obligation to Work"
      So you are right, talking about your experience, and you are wrong at the same time, because the change had been gradual and did not happen evenly, it was also more complex then people simply being forced to go to work.

  • @FTBASTAR
    @FTBASTAR Год назад +459

    Boomers had it easy, its funny that they dont want to accept that.

    • @randomstuff-qu7sh
      @randomstuff-qu7sh Год назад +112

      I suspect that a lot of them are just out of touch with current reality for the working class. They remember how it was for them. Post WW2, housing was abundant and inexpensive. Loyalty to employers was still a thing and still rewarded. Heck, careers that paid pension when you retired were still fairly common. Most of them are now retired, already own their homes, already have their pension, and haven't had to deal with the housing and job markets in years. So when they hear us complain that we're working 2 full time jobs and still struggling to pay bills, they assume we're just doing something wrong. The news picks up on "silly wastes of money" like avocado toast, and many in the older generation see that as the perfect explanation for why we're struggling while they were fine. Note: Since there is a lot of economic variation among the Boomers, this is an extreme generalization.

    • @Lem0nsquid
      @Lem0nsquid Год назад +78

      They had the greatest standard of living in history. The whole world was in ruins except the United States

    • @theempirestrikesback
      @theempirestrikesback Год назад +68

      No one wants to accept being told a significant portion of their life successes were primarily dependant on demographics in a culture that prioritizes individual responsibility.

    • @tamarastone141
      @tamarastone141 Год назад +29

      So true...at this point, I have more in common with the Silent Generation than I do with a Boomer. I'm Gen X by the way...I don't even waste my time rationalizing with a Boomer anymore.

    • @elainealibrandi6364
      @elainealibrandi6364 Год назад +16

      I don't generalize about an entire generation. You mustn't either. All boomers did not have it easy. My family was very poor and lived in a dangerous place, including inside the home. We had terrible schools. My family had a small water heater in the kitchen of our rented apartment and we all took turns using the same bath water. Do you know what it's like to go to bed hungry and know there's still going to be no food in the morning? I don't know where all of these upper middle class boomers were, but I certainly never met them. My mother made about $3,000/year in 1966 (that's about $27,000 for a family of five now) and my father was a lazy bum who didn't work. It's not boomers like me who are out of touch with today's reality; it's these RUclips videos that are out of touch with how diverse boomers were. Yes, there were pensions, but you had to work at the same place for 10 years to get one by the time I was working in the late 1970s. Where I worked closed after 7 years, so no pension.

  • @HorrorGirlLover
    @HorrorGirlLover Год назад +483

    I’m going on 33 this year, live with my mom all my life and I know financially I couldn’t ever do it without her. When I graduated high school so many were happy to live on their own yet a year or two later they are back living with their parents or other family members because they can’t financially do it. So glad there are facts to back all this madness up.

    • @isaacsilva666
      @isaacsilva666 Год назад +1

      @@WildLifePrime taking care of 4 kids must be really hard with the prices of everything going up these days

    • @dracojensei1141
      @dracojensei1141 Год назад +16

      So glad I won the $3,000 month lottery I still work though

    • @SlasherwaveVideo
      @SlasherwaveVideo Год назад +8

      @@dracojensei1141mmmm congratulations

    • @jeffpadilla9891
      @jeffpadilla9891 Год назад

      So what did you do after high school? Job? College?

    • @mate53
      @mate53 Год назад +26

      I moved out twice and back in twice. I'm 31.
      Everyone's situation is different but I'd rather give my mom money and help her than pay a "landlord" who works for a giant company and lives 700 miles away.

  • @budlebubthebard301
    @budlebubthebard301 7 месяцев назад +13

    Everything feels so hopeless. I fucked up as a child and chose to chase my dream rather than business and politics. Besides my dream job..all I’ve ever wanted was a home and family. I work minimum wage, I can’t even pay for health check ups. I’m scared by the time I have enough to buy a house it’ll be too late. I’m scared as I’m getting closer to my 30s that I may hit that infertile point. I don’t even have a car, my boyfriend is in the same boat with his dream job. I have to rely on him for a ride and everything outside of work. It hurts that two people can’t even pay for a single room apartment without the sacrifice of all their money and their beloved pets.

    • @eightlights4939
      @eightlights4939 27 дней назад

      Its only hopeless if you chose to do nothing about it

    • @BLACKLABEL405
      @BLACKLABEL405 24 дня назад

      You think you would make money doing business or politics? You aren't the only one that would have those degrees.😂

    • @jameswestberg6549
      @jameswestberg6549 23 дня назад

      If you think its helpless now vote for Commie Kamala.

  • @jasonbarney4278
    @jasonbarney4278 Год назад +253

    We are screwed, especially those of us who didn’t start planning and being conscious of this at 20 years old. Travel, partying, poor decisions, just being uninformed - boom! You’re screwed!

    • @thepspman116
      @thepspman116 Год назад +61

      You mean you had...fun? Damn I thought your 20s was suppose to be a time of fun and fuck ups

    • @darrenpat182
      @darrenpat182 11 месяцев назад +35

      @@thepspman116 Work comes first, fun second, thats why its called work hard play hard, but now were encouraged to play hard and work back breakingly harder.

    • @tayacushenberry
      @tayacushenberry 11 месяцев назад +71

      Lol doesn’t matter how HARD you work, the wages aren’t increasing and rent isn’t getting cheaper either.

    • @Sueiei29737
      @Sueiei29737 11 месяцев назад

      Instead of saying "we are screwed". Try to make plan to get out of that. Humans are superior to animals because of they can control their impulses and they can adapt. If there was some east asian who just magically appeared in US or in Europe with no experience or education, I'm pretty sure he could get out of that problems.

    • @SkySong6161
      @SkySong6161 10 месяцев назад +17

      @@tayacushenberry No kidding. Working harder doesn't matter if hard work only gets you another day of hard work. I was *better paid* (adjusted for cost of living) 15 years ago in a call center than I am now in a white collar job that pays 10x what I made back then. 100k is the de facto new minimum wage and most households (let alone individuals) don't make that much.

  • @austinsmiley4590
    @austinsmiley4590 Год назад +183

    Won't lie as a millennial having lived through 2 recessions I can't help but feel behind and I'm tired of trading time for money (how do you put a price on your time) it doesn't matter what I do I can't get ahead. Thanks for reading.

    • @princessmarlena1359
      @princessmarlena1359 Год назад +22

      “I’ve lived through eight recessions, twelve panics, and five years of ‘McKinleynomics’…” I hear you though, seriously. When I graduated high school in SoCal, there were NO jobs available anywhere in my neighborhood.

    • @k-dogg9086
      @k-dogg9086 11 месяцев назад +1

      Start trading. First 1,000 I get again is going to a trade. Always wanted to always broke, but this time my broke a** is gonna put money into stocks!

  • @chartreusemaiden604
    @chartreusemaiden604 Год назад +136

    I'm a millennial who graduated college in 2008. 2008 they ruined my life. My degree was for nothing. Alot of us were forever screwed in 2008 and 2009. And everytime I start to get back on my feet we end up with another phucking economic crisis and I AGAIN have to start over.

    • @baronzad2056
      @baronzad2056 Год назад +30

      as a zoomer, my strat is to not try. I wont have to start over if I never started in the first place 👍

    • @chartreusemaiden604
      @chartreusemaiden604 Год назад +7

      @@baronzad2056 I need to learn that lesson and accept it

    • @isabellaflorentina7574
      @isabellaflorentina7574 9 месяцев назад +4

      There was a housing crash between 2008 and 2012. Foreclosures were off the charts. You could have picked up a great home for under 50 k. Why didn't you buy a house then? Let me guess the starter home you could afford didn't check all the boxes of your "dream home".

    • @KitKat-te7jn
      @KitKat-te7jn 9 месяцев назад +16

      ​@@isabellaflorentina7574 Buy a home with what deposit? They were straight out of college

    • @isabellaflorentina7574
      @isabellaflorentina7574 9 месяцев назад

      @@KitKat-te7jn it's called SAVINGS. I was just starting my 3rd year of college when I bought my first home. Worked all night 11-7 shift and busted my a$$ at college during the day. And received no help at all from my parents/family. Sometimes you have to Make sacrifices. Like foregoing the newest iPhone for instance in order to save money. It can he done.

  • @GruseligerZigeuner
    @GruseligerZigeuner 7 месяцев назад +15

    For me as a European it is ridiculous to think about that a house in the US costs about half a million dollars. Since the build quality in the US is just so bad, I mean these houses are basically made of wood. Here in Europe houses are made from cement and steel and cost about the same.

    • @cellochel1582
      @cellochel1582 4 дня назад

      The quality is bad. It’s very bad. In FL, we obviously have hurricanes. Houses costing $440,000+ are made with vinyl siding… in Florida…
      Can’t imagine how much hurricane insurance is on those damn things.

  • @joeyballaman
    @joeyballaman Год назад +71

    Annoying to see others calling the generation lazy but the truth is that majority of jobs salary only cover rent and food expenses with little to no room for savings.

    • @chanela.7786
      @chanela.7786 Год назад +15

      Shoot and it’s barely enough to even pay for basic necessities, I’ve seen jobs pay less than what you can get in unemployment…

    • @practicaliching2311
      @practicaliching2311 Год назад

      It's because Democrats use high taxes, open immigration, and over regulation to put slack into the labor market. Which lowers wages at the bottom and drives up housing prices at the same time. To the point tens of millions of people don't have any money left over at the end of the month. And it's the low wages at the bottom that allows the excesses at the top, causing the wealth gap.
      It a deliberate policy because Democrats need a permanent underclass of unemployed and underemployed to be dependent on government so they will keep voting Democrat to get handouts.
      Same reason Democrats pushed banks to make zero down loans to minorities at the top of the housing bubble. To drive them into poverty.
      Same reason Democrats give easy access to student loans. Because they know only 40 percent of black students graduated from four year bachelor degree programs within six years. And only 64 percent of white students. They know the debt without the degree would drive them into poverty.
      Every single thing the Democrats do is designed to create an underclass of poor people.

    • @quentinking1188
      @quentinking1188 Год назад

      The funny thing is that the very people calling us lazy are the ones who are responsible for our situation with their refusing to pay us salaries comparable to what they had while also not charging us for literally everything in a comparable way that they had while calling us commies for just wanting to have the opportunities that they had while denying us them. The generations after boomers are the first historical generations to be less successful because of the boomers. I hate boomers so much it's unreal

    • @NickNakelski
      @NickNakelski Год назад +2

      I make a little over 2k a month working overtime weekly but luckily I’m only 18 and still live with my mom because the average cost of rent for a 1 bedroom in my area is 1600 a month. I pay 250 for my car 300 for insurance I would literally be going negative every month even working full time +OT making 15 an hour

    • @linnerellie209
      @linnerellie209 Год назад

      I would say that the generation is more on the lazy side. If people really wanted something they would work harder for it. My oldest daughter who was born in 1998 bought her first house at 22. My second oldest born in 2000 bought her first house last year and my third oldest who was born in 2003 is almost finished saving for her first house. They all worked since they were 16 and after highschool they each worked two jobs to get what they wanted. It comes down to making sacrifices and dedication

  • @jakkuwolfinsomnia8058
    @jakkuwolfinsomnia8058 Год назад +328

    I’m British and I feel this hard because when I was born my mother owned a 10 bedroom property which at the time was worth £112,000 in 1992. She sold it in 2000 and bought a smaller 4 bedroom house. The 10 bedroom house just sold this year for £2.4 million 😅 the house I grew up in would’ve set me and my siblings for life lol

    • @Natak222
      @Natak222 Год назад +23

      No point dwelling! Think about it this way, people who will be looking to buy houses in 10, 20 or 30 years will look back at todays house market with huge envy and jealousy as prices will be even more exorbitant!

    • @emmachine27
      @emmachine27 Год назад +6

      The people who sold the house for 2.4 million should have been put into jail for fraud and completly dispossessed. It is basicly a crime of greed they are doing ruining the people financially they are selling the house to.

    • @Natak222
      @Natak222 Год назад +49

      @@emmachine27 ..Are you living in the real world? 💀 They sold the house according to market demand. It’s no different than buying stocks in hopes of It 30x in 20 years

    • @jakkuwolfinsomnia8058
      @jakkuwolfinsomnia8058 Год назад +8

      @@Natak222 exactly that is indeed how I look at it, same with the stock market. In a Crisis everybody’s panicking but nobody’s noticing that it’s an opportunity rolled out right at your very doorstep. My mother made her fortune from buying real estate in 2008 when the crash happened

    • @jakkuwolfinsomnia8058
      @jakkuwolfinsomnia8058 Год назад +1

      @@emmachine27 well unfortunately it’s just inflation, nothing criminal about it, it’s the result of an economy getting richer or other economies getting richer

  • @demodrakkaen0316
    @demodrakkaen0316 Год назад +56

    So the advice basically boils down to: Don't live in a city because then you won't be able to find somewhere to live that fits within your 30% budget.
    Don't live in a rural area because you need to have job options so you can hop jobs for better pay.
    Don't have outrageous debt so don't buy a car unless you can afford it, even though you'll need it to commute to work.
    Did I miss anything?

    • @marmedalmond9958
      @marmedalmond9958 11 месяцев назад +1

      You can get a cheap toyota corolla for 2k or sometjing

    • @SkySong6161
      @SkySong6161 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@marmedalmond9958 And spend 1k a month repairing it, and missing work 2-3 times a month because it broke down on the road or didn't start at all.
      ... and that's assuming you had 2k to buy it outright in the first place. Poverty charges interest. :)

    • @marmedalmond9958
      @marmedalmond9958 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@SkySong6161 a 2008 toyota corolla is one of the most reliable cars. In 3rd world countries, people still drive them

    • @SkySong6161
      @SkySong6161 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@marmedalmond9958 doesn't mean you still don't have to repair them. A lot. Speak from experience from having a 2000 Corolla for 15 years and over 200k miles. I eventually got a different car because it needed repairs so consistently, and so expensively, that the car payment was *cheaper* than fixing it. Unless you're the sort that can do *all* of your own car repairs - you have both the expertise, the time, a location to do it in and the equipment - there's no getting away from the fact that as a car ages, it's going to need an increasing number and increasingly expensive repairs, no matter what kind of car it is. Reliability can kick that can down the road for a while, but not forever.

    • @marmedalmond9958
      @marmedalmond9958 10 месяцев назад

      @@SkySong6161 then ill buy a bike thend

  • @ZENIGMATV
    @ZENIGMATV 7 месяцев назад +41

    Inflation and taxes are easily outrunning wages so you need to create a business or revenue that doesn’t rely on an hourly wage.

    • @cheryllee81
      @cheryllee81 5 месяцев назад +4

      Yes, because the U.S. is trillions in debt. What's happening now was bound to happen. I remember people saying our children will have to pay for this debt, and it's not consumer debt either.

  • @masonturner2124
    @masonturner2124 Год назад +295

    I believe the cost of living crisis partially explains the generational gap of job hopping vs staying at the dame company. Previous generations could stay at a company for 20+ years because it was actually affordable. Younger career professionals who are saving for a house/being financially comfortable job hop out of necessity.

    • @donaldlyons17
      @donaldlyons17 Год назад +31

      Yeah many onlie say switching jobs is the easiest way to increase income and I tend to agree.

    • @anthonysim563
      @anthonysim563 Год назад +26

      Worked for me, I stayed at my first job for 10 years and it screwed me financially. I finally jumped...

    • @FrackaLacka
      @FrackaLacka Год назад +45

      Not to mention they use to give raises more liberally, now companies want you to work hard “for the sake of working hard” and instead of giving you a raise they give you a pizza party

    • @SinTeller
      @SinTeller Год назад +8

      ​@@FrackaLacka literally this. Over a year of working, I got less than a dollar added while simultaneously being told I was one of the hardest working employees. I can't afford to move out of my parent's house because rent for a "cheap" apartment alone is about 70% of what I make in a month (where they give me hours). I'm looking for a second job. My coworkers who have two jobs are still needing financial help from their parents to afford apartments. But hey, who needs reasonable raises when our company can buy us candy and nearly expired cereal.

    • @iowacub1
      @iowacub1 Год назад +5

      Not to mention that there used to be something called a pension that incentivized people to stay long term. Then companies reneged on this in order to increase profit margins and dumped everyone onto the casino that is the stock market in the form of 401ks. My parents had to delay retirement because their 401k took such a big hit in 2008.

  • @madscientistmikhail
    @madscientistmikhail Год назад +130

    Wife and I made 120k a year. The only debt being student loans. Rent took over half our income. A single bedroom apartment outside the city. Moved back home to Montana built a yurt instead of a typical house. Best thing we ever did. Homes are stupid expensive. We still are poor but happier.

    • @madscientistmikhail
      @madscientistmikhail Год назад +11

      We were in Seattle. Housing was insane.

    • @MN-hv5xv
      @MN-hv5xv Год назад +4

      That’s sounds exciting living in a yurt though 😊

    • @gatheringsunshine1219
      @gatheringsunshine1219 Год назад +2

      Mind if I ask what area? I'm from Colorado, I've been wanting to leave permanently (I've moved back to Denver a few times and keep regretting it) and Montana is one state I'm considering on my list. The yurt sounds bad ass!

    • @madscientistmikhail
      @madscientistmikhail Год назад +3

      Montana. Just outside Helena. We were fortunate to have family owned land. Land is not cheap either. The right place in Montana is still attainable for moderate incomes though.

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 Год назад +3

      You made a 120K a year you weren't poor. If you were spending 50% on rent then move to a cheaper place

  • @bobowon5450
    @bobowon5450 Год назад +237

    my mind is always blown when people say things like your auto loan should be under 10% or your housing costs should be under 30% when most people i know have rents that cost them around 70-80% of their income and have to steal food from where they work to live. And that's the cheapest rent possible

    • @Kekonugu
      @Kekonugu Год назад +24

      not a US citizen, but yeah, we have it even worse. Renting of a tiny apartment is 80%. I work 60 hours a week with almost 10 years experience in my field to afford just renting. There's no way I can put aside money for buying a flat. I can't work 15 hours 7 days a week.

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 Год назад +6

      It's not that crazy when you look at median wages

    • @k-dogg9086
      @k-dogg9086 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@jsebby2284 true slave wages, yet if they go up things will increase even more. Can we even win???

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 11 месяцев назад

      @@k-dogg9086 I'm not sure what you're asking?

    • @k-dogg9086
      @k-dogg9086 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@jsebby2284 it was a rhetorical question..

  • @deborahcheung8636
    @deborahcheung8636 7 месяцев назад +4

    No matter how hard I work, I can never buy a home. I hope my lifespan ends when Im 65 so I dont have to be old and homeless.

  • @marcofranca1397
    @marcofranca1397 Год назад +302

    "Rent with 30% of your income or less" proceeds to laugh in Miami prices.

    • @nickmazzio6622
      @nickmazzio6622 Год назад +18

      That’s where I’m at and I’m thinking the same thing. I think 40% is the lowest I’ve heard out of all my friends. And we all have decent paying jobs

    • @thankthank81
      @thankthank81 Год назад +5

      Get a roommate it’s the only way

    • @BilalKhan-kv7ti
      @BilalKhan-kv7ti Год назад +7

      Why are you living in Miami?

    • @nickmazzio6622
      @nickmazzio6622 Год назад +1

      @@BilalKhan-kv7ti because it’s warm and it’s fun

    • @BilalKhan-kv7ti
      @BilalKhan-kv7ti Год назад +6

      @@nickmazzio6622 you can't get 30% because your paying extra for the good weather and sun

  • @biapinder
    @biapinder Год назад +180

    My husband is 26 and I'm 24 living in a small house with his 64y mom that helps with the house bills. It's really frustrating living with a parent in law as a married couple(for the obvious reasons) but we have no money to afford renting a place or buying a house. His mom had to co-sign for him to be able to get a car and he makes 40k an year, it's just not being enough to have anything in savings at all. We live in the woods and I stay home all day because I don't have a car and for not having any experience or worked before it puts me all the way at the bottom, I've been applying for jobs online and in town like crazy and I don't even get called for interviews. It's making me suicidal being in this situation and what is going to save me is someone giving me a change to work somewhere so I can start saving money and buy a cheap car for myself and then go from there but I can't even get a job.

    • @M3l_0N666
      @M3l_0N666 Год назад

      Id sooner be a Partisan, and burn the fking country down, because its failures unto its people, is not worth spilling your own blood over. Take it from me, as a millennial with the same issues, but i live in a 3rd world country on the brink of collapse, and we dont off ourselves, i dont consider my life so worthless to indulge this corrupt state with my death. So darling, dont succumb to hopelessness, keep your chin high. We have to shape the future, even if it means we have to do it like humanity has always done it, risking our lives and building a new age on the bones of the old.
      Have a little self respect and integrity.

    • @dappiduck
      @dappiduck Год назад +6

      Theres a video on youtube about signing up to be hired as a friend on particular websites - totally legic, no dodgy business. Have a look into it because its accessible globally, you just need the internet.
      Theres a few options for online hustling - dropshipping, selling white label products, etc. You can also apply for transcription work if youre a fast typer with good heating.
      Can also potentially study something like counsellong which many therapists do remotely... and therefore, nationally, globally, etc.
      If you have a degree you could always start a youtube channel about your specialist subject to keep you fresh while youre in this limbo.
      Wish you all the best x

    • @hrhtreeoflife4815
      @hrhtreeoflife4815 Год назад +8

      Q
      You are BLESSED to live in the woods 🪵.
      Here's a helpful hint.
      #1 gather branches from the forest floor.
      Start a fire 🔥 make some food.
      #2 gather berries and mushrooms.
      Berries make great jam too...eat it on toast.
      #3 take some seeds and spread it around, grow some vegetables in containers or a small patch.
      #4 raise rabbit 🐇 and quail....you will have meat, fur, eggs, and livestock to advertise and to sell.
      #5 youtube stuff and learn and earn.
      #6 you can tutor neighbors kids in English and Math.
      #7 See what's FREE. A bicycle 🚲 can help!
      GET A RIDE INTO TOWN
      and look around!!! Walk 🚶‍♀️ by homes 🏡 and see if they put stuff on the sidewalk and it's for free. People donate, clothing, shoes, electronics, furniture, etc....
      Pick it up and take it home to use, sell, or gift 🎁 to others.
      HAVE HOPE, FAITH AND LOVE.
      Q ❤️

    • @marks2997
      @marks2997 Год назад

      Hang in there. It will happen!!

    • @danwake4431
      @danwake4431 Год назад +1

      a cosigner was needed at 40k a year?? What car did he buy if you dont mind me asking? in the early 2000s i was making around 40k and i could walk in a bank and ten minutes later walk out with a fat check. by myself. but i was buying a Ford Ranger so it was a practical purchase.

  • @DivineKnight_115
    @DivineKnight_115 Год назад +99

    I just spoke to a 23 year old insurance agent and she said she’s moving back in with her mom because rent is too high to function. Paying monthly for something she’ll never own and can get kicked out of for any reason. Plus most of us are just waiting for some kind of inheritance. That’s the only way you’ll get a house now and that’s moving in after the grandparents die. This is a major problem.

    • @jerrynavarro9580
      @jerrynavarro9580 7 месяцев назад +3

      I totally agree with you 👍 💯

    • @johnbaber9660
      @johnbaber9660 7 месяцев назад

      Rent is Never A good thing. Don't listen to the Retards.

    • @nolongeranurse3369
      @nolongeranurse3369 7 месяцев назад

      Don't count on inheritance ..your Grands are living longer and sicker...unless you are willing to move in and care for them 24/7 for years then Medicaid will require they are BROKE before nursing home will be covered

  • @GeorgeFuchsEnt
    @GeorgeFuchsEnt Месяц назад +19

    “HOW SHE RESTORED MY FINANCES” steps below...

    • @GeorgeFuchsEnt
      @GeorgeFuchsEnt Месяц назад

      the first step to acquire wealth is figuring-out your goals with heIp of a financiaI pIanner, and foIIowing through with lnteIIigent ideas; you will acquire wealth in no time and also enjoy the decision of managing your money.

    • @GeorgeFuchsEnt
      @GeorgeFuchsEnt Месяц назад

      l made better decisions that grew my finances (over 1M in 2yrs) with heIp of my financiaI pIanner. Got my 3rd house Iast month, and will retire soon.

    • @GeorgeFuchsEnt
      @GeorgeFuchsEnt Месяц назад

      ELIZABETH GREEN HUNTS

    • @GeorgeFuchsEnt
      @GeorgeFuchsEnt Месяц назад

      Get to her with her name..

    • @margerygledson8801
      @margerygledson8801 Месяц назад

      Good I got here. Big Thanks

  • @podcastingexplained
    @podcastingexplained Год назад +158

    Being a millennial or Gen-Z is like starting playing monopoly where the other players already bought all the land and houses and wherever you land on you have to give them money. And when you try to work for money you get exponentially less pay (adjusted for purchasing power), as well as needing more time/money in training because you're expected to do 5 job roles in one, and at the first recession you're fired so the continuity of employment is also a challenge. The solution here is to not play. Like the Chinese say "Let it Rot", and move to a country where these events haven't unfolded yet.

    • @magdamejia9704
      @magdamejia9704 Год назад +19

      You mean let move to another planets / people are coming here from other countries 😂

    • @k-dogg9086
      @k-dogg9086 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@magdamejia9704 that means more opportunities abroad if they're all coming here.

    • @darkstrifequeen1458
      @darkstrifequeen1458 10 месяцев назад +3

      And you wonder why I always hated monopoly.

    • @GhostSamaritan
      @GhostSamaritan 9 месяцев назад +9

      Full circle. The game Monopoly was invented as social commentary about the unfairness of capitalism (until the game itself became absorbed by capitalism).

    • @taiven.lechevalier
      @taiven.lechevalier 9 месяцев назад +5

      Your analogy to Monopoly was perfect.

  • @jabbottron9643
    @jabbottron9643 Год назад +65

    That 70k average household income is based on 2 earners, so it’s even more difficult or near impossible as a single person

    • @donaldlyons17
      @donaldlyons17 Год назад +16

      Scary part is people say why not get a "better" job. Like 35K is not the legal minimum so what you mean a "better" job?

    • @misterbanshee7992
      @misterbanshee7992 Год назад +13

      You need two earners making 100k year after tax to be comfortable lol

    • @Pistolita221
      @Pistolita221 Год назад +8

      ​@@misterbanshee7992 depends on if you're in the country or not, but for any US city, yup. 200k household.

    • @barondystopia
      @barondystopia Год назад +5

      @@donaldlyons17 They absolutely make it sound so easy. Like all you have to do is wish it into existence.

    • @wallacelongbottoms2739
      @wallacelongbottoms2739 Год назад +1

      @@donaldlyons17 exactly that… get a better job which will pay you more. Minimum wage is bottom of the barrel. Aim higher.

  • @randomstuff-qu7sh
    @randomstuff-qu7sh Год назад +69

    I do think the younger generations have it worse than the boomers. There was a trend that started around the 1970s (in the US) where executive compensation started to drastically increase while worker's compensation functionally stagnated. Since the cost of living has also been going up faster than worker's wages, overall purchasing power for the working class has been going down. It also feels like as the gap between the haves and the have nots grows, capitalism has become more predatory. Housing is a prime example. People buying up homes with profit motive can easily outbid the families who just want a place to live. Then those profit driven buyers act as unwanted middlemen who drive up the prices to rent or purchase without adding any real value. There are also the lower cost housing traps. Consider manufactured homes. You buy the home, but don't own the land that its on. The home is technically mobile, but expensive to move. So, you're in a hostage situation; you have to pay whatever the land owner decides to charge for rent unless you have several thousand dollars on hand and can find a land owner with the proper utility hookups willing to offer a better deal. If you don't pay up, they'll demolish your home and rent the lot to someone else.

    • @StarboyXL9
      @StarboyXL9 Год назад +1

      You've just given me an idea. My one farmer buddy has offered me his land as a place to park my trailer when I get one (cheaper than a house) I think maybe I might buy a shipping container instead and convert it into a mini-home and live on his land for free (if he'll let me). Maybe chipping in on some chores will win him over.

    • @freedomdude5420
      @freedomdude5420 6 дней назад

      The 1970, the decade bad of policies

  • @clintonelias171
    @clintonelias171 4 месяца назад +6

    Born in 1961 the world has changed alot for the large majority of the lower class and never for the better, but that's the plan, keep the poor, poor. Someone needs to do the low wage jobs, there is lots of those out there. The problem is no entry level homes, and I'm sure that was planned as we see the shortage of affordable housing. All things are going according to plan! This will never change.

  • @soundproofist
    @soundproofist Год назад +95

    Yes, it’s a fact that the cost of housing, food, education, and transportation (car ownership) have gotten exponentially more expensive in the past 25 years. And very few people can afford these prices (like a $700 per month car payment), no matter what age. But I rarely see anyone exploring the root causes of “why,” and what’s behind this aggressive skyrocketing of basic living costs. Without knowing the cause, it seems like it will just continue to get worse.

    • @randomstuff-qu7sh
      @randomstuff-qu7sh Год назад +51

      The why is complex. There are a lot of factors at play, although if you want a root cause, I would say it is an issue with our economic system. These problems are happening in more than just the US, but I am less knowledgeable of the factors at play outside the US. Our corporations and stock market demand constant growth. You may recall earlier in the year where the tech sector had massive layoffs, not because they were losing money, but because they weren't growing fast enough. This demand for constant growth has resulted in smaller players getting muscled out or purchased by the bigger players. Put another way, corporations are getting bigger and more powerful, and the lack of competition is bad for consumers and for workers. The whole concept of a free market is supposed to be that nobody can get away with offering a bad deal because the market will reward the competitor that gives a good deal instead. When you have a tiny number of suppliers who dominate each market, it feels more like they march in lock step, offering very similar bad deals. Rather than trust busting and maintaining genuine competition in the market, the government has rather consistently rubber stamped merger after merger, allowing these corporations to grow increasingly powerful. Our government also seems to heavily favor the supply side in times of economic crisis. We give out massive corporate bail outs because of how important they are to the economy while the rest of us are left to struggle as prices go up and jobs vanish.

    • @josephbrown9685
      @josephbrown9685 Год назад +10

      I see your point and agree with it in general, but if someone has a $700 per month car payment, he or she is paying too much for a car.

    • @trinasmith4326
      @trinasmith4326 Год назад

      It's planned. Corporations will buy up most of the property and everything will be a subscription. They make more money that way and have more power over people. We will go back to being serves.

    • @someone-ji2zb
      @someone-ji2zb Год назад +7

      Oh idk, maybe the welfare policies we have been voting in for over 4 decades now? All of these benefits don't grow magically come out of thin air. We have been paying for it in every aspect of our lives, and it has always been getting worse and worse every year. Businesses get taxed out of their minds as well, and the more businesses get taxed, the less inclined they are to worry about employee satisfaction/loyalty.
      We need to return to a time where work allowed you to live, but refusal to work was death. No government help, no bail outs... just choose to live and benefit society or die by your own hand.

    • @shastaweston
      @shastaweston Год назад

      we need another world war to reset everything

  • @simpanzee1006
    @simpanzee1006 Год назад +64

    Im a nurse, ive been working full time since i graduated for, lets say 4.5 years. I am still nowhere near being able to afford a small home. And renting would take about half my income. I save about 95 percent of my income. The residents i work for have no clue of how hard it is for people, they are all out of touch and do think its our problem

    • @Winterascent
      @Winterascent Год назад +10

      I was also a male nurse and left after 8 years for some of the reasons you mention. The job is disgusting, people are disgusting, and there is no reason to that when you aren't getting anything for it.

    • @DraintheSwamp2020
      @DraintheSwamp2020 Год назад +10

      Hospitals are the most toxic workplace environment ive ever experienced

    • @monadejaneiro
      @monadejaneiro Год назад +1

      If I were you… I’d just be a travel nurse because they make way more

    • @atrxyu
      @atrxyu Год назад +2

      ​@@monadejaneiro yeah I'm not a nurse so I don't know the reality of it but it's hard to feel sympathetic for nurses when every day I see job posting for nurses advertising a 30k signing bonus or something insane like that

    • @practicaliching2311
      @practicaliching2311 Год назад

      It's because Democrats use high taxes, open immigration, and over regulation to put slack into the labor market. Which lowers wages at the bottom and drives up housing prices at the same time. To the point tens of millions of people don't have any money left over at the end of the month. And it's the low wages at the bottom that allows the excesses at the top, causing the wealth gap.
      It a deliberate policy because Democrats need a permanent underclass of unemployed and underemployed to be dependent on government so they will keep voting Democrat to get handouts.
      Same reason Democrats pushed banks to make zero down loans to minorities at the top of the housing bubble. To drive them into poverty.
      Same reason Democrats give easy access to student loans. Because they know only 40 percent of black students graduated from four year bachelor degree programs within six years. And only 64 percent of white students. They know the debt without the degree would drive them into poverty.
      Every single thing the Democrats do is designed to create an underclass of poor people.

  • @egresham02
    @egresham02 Год назад +183

    I believe some of these issues are a carryover from the recession. The banks got bailed out, but many people suffered greatly, which was shameful. I am a millennial who struggled to land full-time work for several years after the 2008 recession started, and it didn't help that I had just graduated from undergrad at the time. Eventually, I landed a position, but then I saw that it was just a glorified dead-end job, so I went back to school and paid for it out of my own pockets. As I was completing my degree, the pandemic struck. I finished my degree, and then I tried to find something in my field and was rejected left and right. Now I am trying to figure out how to work for myself because working for others is just not it.

    • @Gg-wh3vi
      @Gg-wh3vi Год назад

      Not only that everyone is finding the loophole to scam their own Allies. My last 4 jobs have attempted to short my checks. Seems nowadays these jobs are available for a reason. It’s no different than trying to support yourself being a criminal. I hope very soon everyone will realize the silent destruction that is about to consume us.

    • @jessielynn
      @jessielynn Год назад

      What did you get your degree in?

    • @egresham02
      @egresham02 Год назад +5

      @@jessielynn Library Information Science

    • @jessielynn
      @jessielynn Год назад +9

      @@egresham02 mine is in interior design and I had the same problem of them wanting experience I obviously didn’t have because I had just graduated and ended up working for free to gain experience. I did get a part time job as a design assistant that $10/hr 🤷🏻‍♀️. They ended up firing me because I wanted to take maternity leave during their busy season lol now I’m in a dead end job but I do love what I do and it has nothing to do with my degree 🤣 I feel your pain!

    • @egresham02
      @egresham02 Год назад +1

      @jessielynn Sorry to hear that you were fired from your job. Glad you were able to find something else.

  • @Alessandro1983
    @Alessandro1983 6 месяцев назад +18

    This is sad. I'm a 40 year old man. I live in Southern California. Single. No kids. No debt. Live alone. But I rent an apartment. Currently investing in a Roth IRA etc, 401k and trying to do what I can to earn more income

    • @stephenh9905
      @stephenh9905 Месяц назад

      Recently moved out of Southern Cali in order to get a house. Prices there were insane!! Mid 20’s. Congrats on the no debt though that’s awesome!!

    • @eightlights4939
      @eightlights4939 27 дней назад

      Living in California is your biggest problem

    • @xragdoll5662
      @xragdoll5662 17 дней назад

      Nepo baby?

  • @Patchouliprince
    @Patchouliprince Год назад +247

    I’m 23, married young, no student debt no credit cards no car loans. My husband and kid and I had to move in with my father because my grandfather in law died and his medical bills were so high we had to sell the house to cover the costs. It’s so infuriating having made a home for myself only to fall back to square one living with my parent. We don’t have a good relationship and it’s certainly not rent free but it was that or homelessness so I’m grateful for a roof over my head

    • @maplenook
      @maplenook Год назад +14

      You sold your home to cover debt of grandpa who died?

    • @Patchouliprince
      @Patchouliprince Год назад +20

      @@maplenook We didn’t have the deed my grandmother in law held the papers and sold it because she had to cover every expense of his death and hospital bills out of pocket and it took all of her finances, hence the house had to be sold. Originally we lived there and were helping her pay the mortgage and were meant to take over the house but obviously that can’t happen now since it’s been sold

    • @WastedBananas
      @WastedBananas 11 месяцев назад +41

      charging your kid rent has always been one of the wilder concepts to me. why bring in children in this world if you're gonna treat them like a burden?

    • @Patchouliprince
      @Patchouliprince 11 месяцев назад +26

      @@WastedBananas I hear that! My parents brought kids into this world because they were young and dumb. I’ve actually spent my life taking care of them not the other way around

    • @june-cz1cw
      @june-cz1cw 10 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@WastedBananasthey called it board for some reason I know it was stupid but when I was a teen I actually asked to pay it I think it was $100 or something I don't remember I guess I felt like I needed to help keep the house going as soon as I got money of my own

  • @jimpickens5936
    @jimpickens5936 Год назад +45

    When he was talking about retirement I had the thought “why wouldn’t I just quit life? I’d rather live and spend happily while young and able to enjoy more” and I think that scarily reflects my thoughts on what’s important in life

    • @GhostSamaritan
      @GhostSamaritan 9 месяцев назад +2

      I think many people choose the "stack up debt and die young" lifestyle, but wouldn't do so if there were other options. That's also why I think crime is sky high.

  • @lordkroak6670
    @lordkroak6670 Год назад +66

    Degrees have lost value this is true. I have learned (being a college student myself) that you have to get the experience in college to even compete these days and just keep looking for opportunities.

    • @josem588
      @josem588 3 месяца назад

      We have inflation of diplomas

  • @In-obscurity-n7j
    @In-obscurity-n7j 6 месяцев назад +4

    I got to ride my bike with my friends. We could go wherever we wanted. A scope of ice cream was a nickel. We played outside without fear until moms called dinner. Paper routes and mowing lawns. Friday night dances at the community center and no shots fired. Summers at the beach holding up score cards with 9 and no arrest. Cruising and necking until our 20s called us away.
    I don't think I had it worse. I thought it was magic. I am so sorry for what young people are going through. They have been robbed of their futures. Sold out for votes.

    • @colematthews7535
      @colematthews7535 Месяц назад

      I’m a 97 kid I’m happy I got to enjoy the last of that in the early 2000’s. It was magic.

  • @alexjustalexyt1144
    @alexjustalexyt1144 9 месяцев назад +187

    Man, all of this just makes me want to give up, cease my existence and rot.

    • @bodiandras
      @bodiandras 7 месяцев назад +27

      This the hand your dealt, how to play it is up to you. Are you making the best plays? You still have time to figure it out. Hang in there!

    • @MrDessertE
      @MrDessertE 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@bodiandras Great answer

    • @madeye6896
      @madeye6896 7 месяцев назад +3

      First reply is gold! Read it, and if you just feel worse, please seek professional help, you know, I’m wishing you a lot of health, luck and happiness internet stranger!

    • @ko2qx
      @ko2qx 7 месяцев назад +3

      consider living out of a fully furnished sprinter van or something. that's the new wave; more people living out their cars (which is rough) or sprinter vans (which isn't rough unless it's a lifestyle you can't get used to over time... sprinter can life isn't that bad tho if it's furnished with a mini kitchen, sink, bed, dining area and couch). just cheaper to do that at this point tbh.

    • @doibantikov2486
      @doibantikov2486 7 месяцев назад +5

      Then they win. I feel you, though. I have suicidal ideation at least once a week. But see your continued existence and pursuit of happiness as defiance.

  • @tjr4459
    @tjr4459 Год назад +367

    As a geriatric millennial (being amongst the oldest of this particular generation 😂), I’ve come to accept the real possibility that I may never be able to afford a home of my own unless I leave the US. By the time I’m at retirement age which will be in the 2040’s I imagine things will be a lot worse and nearly impossible to live comfortably in the US on a fixed income no matter how much I’ve managed to contribute to a 401K.

    • @donaldlyons17
      @donaldlyons17 Год назад +21

      Yeah but truth is rich places are getting progressively more unaffordable.

    • @socalrefrigeration548
      @socalrefrigeration548 Год назад +17

      Get ready for that street life. Might as well start stealing gas now.

    • @James-eq8cq
      @James-eq8cq Год назад +12

      I'm 29 years old with a house in Vancouver - if I can do it, you can too

    • @donaldlyons17
      @donaldlyons17 Год назад +42

      @@James-eq8cq If your 29 you should already know what is possible for you might not be possible for others. Buying a house using traditional methods is an ordeal unless one is making a certain amount to outpace expenses. Over 10 years ago I could not even get the 3 people I lived with to pay $135 each per month to rent from me while I paid the other half of bills. So having seen that it is possible some people will never own a brick and motor home!!!!

    • @laupeter4594
      @laupeter4594 Год назад

      WW3 is coming guys. Why bother to buy a home when it will be bombed into rubble?

  • @reverbedvonacular
    @reverbedvonacular Год назад +25

    Browsing the comments on this video... it's really easy to discern between the newer generations actually trying to afford housing today and the older generations sitting comfortably screaming from their perches.

  • @stose85
    @stose85 3 месяца назад +4

    As an older millennial 1985, my dad always warned against job hopping. He had two pensions and stayed at one of those positions until the company went bankrupt. The other lasted until retirement. I made several moves for money and am currently at my longest employer 3+ years. If you leave for > 9% increases in wages, you completely beat the system of 2% increases or less each year, and like the video said, can garner new/better skills and reach management faster. Just be prepared to explain why you left in an interview. The life we are living is not that of our parents. Man do I miss the 90's.

  • @sugoruyo
    @sugoruyo Год назад +84

    As a millennial and engineer for a major US tech firm making a 6 figures in London for the last couple years I can say the cost of housing squeeze has gotten so bad where the most logical course of action is to go back to sharing a flat with at least one more person. At 37yo, that is not an option I'm considering and would, frankly, rather GTFO and try my luck with remote jobs from a country where I have a hope of one day living without paying for someone else's wealth.

    • @pax1217
      @pax1217 Год назад +7

      Some people decide to change country, for example we see this on Mexico, the sad thing is that also affects here locally where prices increases because you guys have a higher spending power.
      A good alternative for developed countries, a bad one for locals. I understand it at some degree since I already had this experience living in France

    • @AngelinaLopez-cx5fw
      @AngelinaLopez-cx5fw 7 месяцев назад

      My parents combined make way more than 6 figures a year yet live paycheck to paycheck. This is in america this inflation shi5 is happening in all countries and the gov is doing it on purpose.

  • @xander9874
    @xander9874 Год назад +84

    This is definitely true, but its hard to keep everything under 30% when it feels like all these companies (Car, Insurance, Credit Cards, Tax, Mortgage/Rent, etc) just want the money out of your pocket. Then when you move jobs every 2 years or so companies don't wanna hire you cause "You won't be in it for the long haul" an issue I have ran into unless its retail. The older generation used the system to their advantage and now our generations are facing the outcome of higher debt and higher affordability for basic needs.

    • @iceman5117
      @iceman5117 Год назад +4

      You won't be in it for the long haul, but even if you were, you'll never see a raise

  • @Splashstar216
    @Splashstar216 Год назад +41

    My sister got her bachelor's degree in HR but now is working for a company where she's only making $19/hr even though she's literally the go-to person. She's asked for a raise and was denied.

    • @hearanecho
      @hearanecho Год назад +2

      I made that from a wfh job! Wow

    • @machspeed8153
      @machspeed8153 10 месяцев назад +1

      Same here. I am the (brains) product expert for a multi-hundred million dollar company, but because I am young and not high in rankings they choose to ignore my pay. I keep their boomers happy, making technology understandable and seamless. These modern companies don't care for training future assets either it seems.

    • @bbqfire6199
      @bbqfire6199 9 месяцев назад

      they are definitely the weak men creating hard times@@machspeed8153

    • @Vibrantly_Monochromatic
      @Vibrantly_Monochromatic 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@machspeed8153you might have to look for another job and see if you can get a raise

  • @justinsmith9851
    @justinsmith9851 6 месяцев назад +6

    Boomers the generation that was given everything

  • @nomad1517
    @nomad1517 Год назад +37

    My question is, why are we ignoring the roots of these problems? Is it because of corruption? Greedy billionaires? How can we change this? It seems everything is falling apart. Are we doing something wrong?

    • @reputablehype
      @reputablehype Год назад

      First they create the problem, then they sell you the solution. Capitalism!

    • @jakeedwards4454
      @jakeedwards4454 Год назад +2

      Too many people on the earth. Huge decline in life incoming.

    • @danwake4431
      @danwake4431 Год назад

      well when youve got billionaires behind the buying like bill gates, china, blackrock, etc, and they are in bed with the politicians, what can you do from a legal standpoint? Not much.

    • @hugogogo13
      @hugogogo13 Год назад

      Overpopulation. Also, before the US was stealing resources from all over the world without anyone noticing. WWII loosers were paying huge reparation bills. Not the case anymore.

  • @Memoreism
    @Memoreism Год назад +79

    I graduated with my bachelor's degree and I can barely get a job making 40k. All the entry level jobs you apply for will say "requires 2 years experience." I apply anyway and then never hear back from them even after doing the personality tests, applications, and multiple aptitude steps. So I'm spending all of this time in front of a computer and never hearing back from the hiring managers. It's very frustrating.

    • @Biracialbaddie
      @Biracialbaddie Год назад +16

      just lie

    • @MsLacieable
      @MsLacieable Год назад +20

      I lied about my experience, I'm actually good at my job so no one noticed.

    • @chanela.7786
      @chanela.7786 Год назад +6

      Completely felt that and have been there, try to contact the actual recruiter directly for any and every job. I’ve been able to get further doing that by building an actual human connection cause sometimes they use bots that will automatically reject your resume before it’s seen by an actual person

    • @xejelah
      @xejelah Год назад +7

      Just throwing it out there - I'm a millennial and I've never made more than 25k/yr my whole life. Which is why I specifically look for locations and towns with a proper living expense/food ratio. I currently rent a 1bd/1bath townhome for 900/mo. I bought my used car 5 years ago, it's paid off and I just upkeep. There's local farmers markets to buy things cheaper than grocery stores. Living within means and comfort is possible, but you have to be willing to move on and look at possibilities.

    • @stevescruby1343
      @stevescruby1343 Год назад +6

      You basically have to lie / fudge and pray to God that they don’t check your references too closely, if at all. Then you have to show up to your underpaid job and bust your ass like crazy - and much of the time your efforts will not even be noticed. Since you are entry level, no loyalty will be shown to you no matter how much you sacrifice.
      The only times I noticeably increased my income at my job was by literally quitting. Otherwise, my superiors did not give a shit about my efforts.

  • @jacobbruxvoort6670
    @jacobbruxvoort6670 Год назад +238

    financial literacy should be taught throughout high school, it should be looked at much more closely and see what the population does

    • @verigumetin4291
      @verigumetin4291 Год назад +12

      Boomer didn't need financial literacy

    • @Kghammond852
      @Kghammond852 Год назад +52

      @@verigumetin4291 To be fair they didn't necessary need to worry about financial literacy cause they just need to wait 2 paychecks before being stable again.

    • @Pistolita221
      @Pistolita221 Год назад

      ​​@@verigumetin4291 you ate too much lead if you think comparing the pre-digitized logistics chain with the modern one makes sense. Like ACTUALLY if you'rethat braindead, you should talk to poison control.

    • @jaysant6958
      @jaysant6958 Год назад

      For sure!

    • @Network126
      @Network126 Год назад +5

      I'm 35, homeless, and drowning in debt and multiple car problems, despite working and not doing drugs.

  • @joanryder3842
    @joanryder3842 7 месяцев назад +5

    Average car payment $716?? If you’re buying a car that expensive and can’t afford it that’s on you!

    • @GR8_S8N
      @GR8_S8N 2 месяца назад +3

      mfer all cars will be that expensive and soon

    • @aprils.r8418
      @aprils.r8418 Месяц назад +2

      Every car is that expensive nowadays

    • @eightlights4939
      @eightlights4939 27 дней назад

      These people dont want to buy a used car. Gotta have the newest thing.

    • @eightlights4939
      @eightlights4939 27 дней назад

      @aprils.r8418 Buy yourself a 1980s mercedes benz for less than 5k and you can keep that car running for decades.

  • @themusic6808
    @themusic6808 Год назад +129

    Few things to consider. Owning a home (even if you can qualify for a mortgage) is incredibly costly when you factor in property taxes, all utilities, balance protection insurance as well as the never ending costs of property and house maintenance on top of the mortgage payment. It easily ends up being over 50 to 60% of a lot of people’s income. On top of that you run the risk of interest rate hikes (not like this is unheard of….) meaning you can end up renewing your mortgage and finding out the payment you we’re comfortable with is no more, which puts a huge financial strain and setback on the incomes paying it. Factor in any time you’re buying or selling there’s going to be thousands of dollars in legal fees, real estate commission and discharge fees from lenders. Not even considering the amount of time it takes to save up just a substantial enough down payment for a house these days is going to be 5 years or more for the average person….and that money likely is sitting liquid not keeping up with inflation as home prices out pace it.

    • @Jeff_G86
      @Jeff_G86 Год назад +25

      100%. The American dream of white picket fence used to be a given. Unless you were chronically unemployed or unmarketable, you got a house.
      That's just no longer the case. But the real kick in the pants is that renting is becoming increasingly unaffordable and you have zero protection.l against increases.
      I live in a somewhat rural area and the aging population's only saving grace is the fact that they own their own homes. They just need to pay heating and property taxes.
      If the subsequent generations can't pay off their homes in time (or even get into one) - there will be a major crisis of unaffordability at the age of retirement for our generation.

    • @sko1beer
      @sko1beer Год назад +3

      @@Jeff_G86 them cheap homes are still around just in locations you want to live in.

    • @rev8419
      @rev8419 Год назад

      Maybe if we closed the borders and stopped importing millions of third world migrants then maybe we wouldn't have this problem 🤷‍♀️

    • @jaysant6958
      @jaysant6958 Год назад

      @@sko1beer where

    • @sko1beer
      @sko1beer Год назад +2

      @@jaysant6958 would you want to live in Detroit?

  • @Iberisnana
    @Iberisnana Год назад +344

    Gen Z here, I just got into university a year ago that my family pushed me to go to and was promised help which I received none of and already in debt and continue to be so. I've lost complete hope to afford anything, from a car to a simple apartment. Seeing food prices spike stressed me out even more. Every time I take a look at home prices out of curiosity only to leave with dissapointment by the cost of it. I'm not sure how I or others will survive, it looks impossible.

    • @ulthanesmorkums
      @ulthanesmorkums Год назад +2

      What's your major?

    • @Iberisnana
      @Iberisnana Год назад +11

      @@ulthanesmorkums I'm majoring in new media art, which is basically just multimedia

    • @codymegehee299
      @codymegehee299 Год назад +75

      @@Iberisnana That's a very bad major to be in right now, if the goal is to make money at all. It's an over saturated job market with high competition, and in danger of being harmed further by AI. Switch, before it's too late.

    • @Iberisnana
      @Iberisnana Год назад

      @@codymegehee299 I don't plan on switching because this is the only thing I'm passionate about and I'm confident in my skills. Where I'm from having a degree is a good thing and have a better chance at landing a well paying job. Besides art and multimedia other jobs have high competition too, so there is no point in switching.

    • @k-dogg9086
      @k-dogg9086 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Iberisnana then do something online with your multimedia.. blogging or something

  • @ethanhopkins83
    @ethanhopkins83 Год назад +257

    I was born in 1997 and things have been tough. The pandemic hit only a few months after I finished college. That pretty much derailed everything I was working for and it was like starting over when jobs started back up. It took over 2 years to find work with decent wages that could keep me ahead of rapidly rising costs. Doing okay now, but dealing with some of debt from that time so realistically have no disposable income. Many of my friends from high school and college who are around the same age are in very similar situations

    • @joycerodrigues1351
      @joycerodrigues1351 Год назад +15

      thats exactly what happened with me also, I feel like I just started to slowly get myself together 2 years from now but I'm still struggling honestly

    • @Celestialplane945
      @Celestialplane945 Год назад

      1996 here and same

    • @goodamacthesecond5931
      @goodamacthesecond5931 Год назад +9

      It killed my 78k a year job and I had to work from scratch to even try to get back to that and I still haven't reached it and it's not jobs I love like that one

    • @user-kg5lq6nd7q
      @user-kg5lq6nd7q 11 месяцев назад +2

      ‘99 here and I’m still living at home been looking for work since traveling after the pandemic. I see all my classmates from high school living it up on their own and I wonder how They’re managing it, questioning my
      Position

    • @maggiem6209
      @maggiem6209 11 месяцев назад +4

      Same. I'm basically only above water because my parents can help me a little. It's a big deal if I can save 100 dollars from a paycheck. Like major celebration time. And I don't even rent a big place. Less than 80 sqft and in a lower middle class area. I haven't given up, but let's just say I spend a long time listening to the Guts theme some nights.

  • @calebplumleeoutdoors
    @calebplumleeoutdoors 3 месяца назад +2

    Giving the "advice" to keep certain expenses below a percentage of your income is USELESS for someone with an income that cannot achieve those ratios.
    I live in Montana. Rent $1500-$1800/mo if you go above a studio (a reasonable ask for a grown adult with a career)... average income is $56k
    So the average person is fkd from the start.
    "Just move" isn't an acceptable answer for the entire average population... that would be 50% of all working montanan's.
    Cool stats/guidelines, but about as helpful as our parents saying "I'd never pay that much, and this place is a dump anyway" before driving home to their $400 mortgage

  • @Inquisitor_Jeff
    @Inquisitor_Jeff 11 месяцев назад +110

    I just hope I’m gone by 50 or 60 so I don’t have to deal with this bullshit in too late of years. Can’t afford a proper home, can’t afford to put enough money into retirement, can barely afford anything anymore, everything just seems fucked and nothing’s getting better.

    • @lilianab4756
      @lilianab4756 7 месяцев назад +6

      Sending you lots of ❤ feel the same. It's ridiculous! All the best 🙏

    • @HIDHIFDB
      @HIDHIFDB 7 месяцев назад +10

      Thats why i already bought a revolver this planet is horrible

    • @kevinmcmillin870
      @kevinmcmillin870 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@HIDHIFDB
      Just stick it out dude. I’m out there in the world just like you. If I’m still trucking along then so can you

    • @HIDHIFDB
      @HIDHIFDB 7 месяцев назад +13

      @@kevinmcmillin870 No thanks just waiting for my parents to go so i can put my self out of this misery, 32 years and everything just get harder, shittier and uglier on this planet.

    • @libertycitygoon320
      @libertycitygoon320 7 месяцев назад +1

      Man, I just hope to live to at least when GTA 8 will be out and find more good pu$$y on the market. I wanna go into Data Science as well. Things are hard, but i am a Berserk mangá reader and a learn with Kentauro Miura that we have to keep going no matter what. Life in Berserk is like a endless struggle.

  • @f1wwwagonburner132
    @f1wwwagonburner132 Год назад +78

    I was 30 when I bought my first house in 2018 at $210k. I used a VA home loan that saved me around $30k from fees and other costs while buying a home. In 2018, I was maxed at $250k for the home loan. Now my house is valued at $309k. I would not be able to afford my house if I bought it today. I did refinance in late 2020 or early 2021 when the loan % went low. I refinanced my home at 2.25% today my mortgage is $1001 a month.

    • @jameshall7048
      @jameshall7048 Год назад +9

      You my good sir/ma’am got to the American Dream before it was too late. I’ll be using a VA loan in a few years as a gen z guy. I have no clue what imma do with those interest rates and pricing. Wishing the best for you tho.

    • @CarlosRamirez-no2js
      @CarlosRamirez-no2js Год назад +1

      I’m 27 and want to get a house with the VA home loan

    • @f1wwwagonburner132
      @f1wwwagonburner132 Год назад +1

      @@CarlosRamirez-no2js do you have a DD214?

  • @DumyRick
    @DumyRick Год назад +17

    I don't even care about money or possessions anymore, I also don't want to work 40 hours a week every week for 50 more years. I'm much happier living in an rv, working only when I need to, and traveling and enjoying nature. It's all I need to be happy.

  • @snoop-a-loop715
    @snoop-a-loop715 7 месяцев назад +2

    As a millennial I don’t know a single person making over 50k a year.

  • @Francois424
    @Francois424 Год назад +22

    Younger generation are DEFINITELY more screwed. I had it though did shitty jobs from 16yo onwards, managed to get in IT thanks to college degree and a connexion that was already in, but lost my job 5 years later thanks tho the IT bubble crash of Y2K. And like that "Snakes and Ladders" board game, you have to climb your way back up again... So I did, and in 2005 my firm decided we earned too much wages and kicked all of us out of a job to go hire cheap labor... and back down the bottom I go again. It took me until 33years old (still earning 13-15$/hour because of getting kicked in the curb all the time mind you) until I got what would become my "real job"... Still at it 17 years later.
    So I now have LOTS of extra cash... Yet I still can't purchase a house... It would cost me 120k in down payment AND 4k/month in repaying the load to purchase a low-end house in my town, and it's far from the worse in the country. Renting is getting ridiculous as well, seeing regular renting price of a 5½ at about 1500$ now, and you don't save much by downsizing as well (a 3½ is like 900-1000$). If you take the house out of the equation, I am as rich as my boomer father was at my age - minus the house... Yeah, not a good deal.
    Now even with the above, the newer generations (Mill and Z's) have it far worse. Cost of living has exploded in the last 10 years, I had solid enough income to overcome that (even tho I must be mindful of where I spend), but for the new guy/girl starting out? like right now fresh new? Hoooooly cow. If you can't stay at your parent's house (for whatever reason), you can't afford anything on the market. You can't pay rent on minimum wage or even minimum + 20%, you'll make like 1750$/month, and you need to pay food / clothes / utilities and the darned rent. So your smelly/crappy 3½ eats the totality of your first pay. If you need a car to get to and from work - good effing luck. If you don't have a car, you're still gonna spend 100$/mo or more on public transport unless you're lucky and can live close to where you work.
    The work market is in shambles too, stupidly low wages, no advancement, getting fired so your boss can get a bonus or just hire new guys/gals and not give you a raise.
    The only way I see a new guy/gal getting by is by renting a 5½ as a group of 3 to 6 ppl (3 singles or 6 as couples), assuming you can stand it that is, not everyone can tolerate so many ppl in one's house.
    The best Gen X and below can hope for is to inherit your parent's house. And if you're like me with a sibbling that does NOT want the house and want HER SHARE of the inheritence? Tough luck, I can't keep the house and pay her... half my parent's property is like 500k, and we're back to about 1750$/month paying back the loan for her part only. At least tho, getting half your parent's house in cash (minus govt' cut, greedy bstards) pays for rent for A LOT of years, probably set until my natural demise...
    But let's hope for a total market collapse. I mean if no one can pay these prices it has to come down eventually? right? never mind, those Chinese investors or that rich mofo in his crystal tower will buy everything and leave us with nothing.
    Yeah good luck guys, we're all going to need it. I pray everyday for a market crash. If housing price would drop by 60% I feel that would be equilibrium.

  • @roninbushida1180
    @roninbushida1180 Год назад +107

    Something else to note about home is this… new homes are almost double the size of new homes in the 50s and 60s. The typical home was around 1200-1600 sqft. Part of the problem is that new home construction does not produce homes that our generation could afford, favoring larger plots with larger homes resulting in a higher profit/sqft and larger margins.

    • @sookendestroy1
      @sookendestroy1 7 месяцев назад +2

      Funny enough the likely next prime minister of canada pointed to a random ranch style old fashioned house as a shithole in a random neighborhood. It wasnt a rundown place but just an older suburban house. Pretty telling as to the modern sentiment, basically that unless you have a two story house with a garage etc. then you dont have a real house.

    • @Bertuzz84
      @Bertuzz84 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@sookendestroy1 Yeah it's definitely a bit of a question of perception. In the Netherlands having a garage is considered a luxury, as the vast majority of the houses don't have one. Also 1200-1600sqf would be quite a good/middle-large sized house in the Netherlands. And housing size pretty much flat since they 70s here and going down atm. But mainly the yard sizes have been relentlessly schrinking due to a lack of land. Having a decent front yard is a rare luxury these days with new builds. And most houses definitely aren't detatched/sfh here.

    • @paulstandaert5709
      @paulstandaert5709 7 месяцев назад +1

      Building codes and rules and regulations delete a lot of the profit margins on smaller, simpler, "more affordable" homes. For example, in California, expect to wait a minimum of 1.5 years to get a building permit. That delay and those hoops COST MONEY. To make up for it, the house needs to be more extravagant.

    • @DIYcedarhilltx
      @DIYcedarhilltx 7 месяцев назад

      Have you seen the shoe box homes they're building? Thats what this generation can afford now 🤭

    • @garrett5214
      @garrett5214 7 месяцев назад

      Actually not a problem. You can take out a construction loan and build your own house smaller for cheaper and expand later. Land cost is the expensive part, but good parcels still exist, you just got to be smart about it.

  • @shootermcgavin4999
    @shootermcgavin4999 Год назад +32

    I live in a medium to large city that a lot of CA boomers are moving to. I'm in my mid 30s. I can't relate to any of these people who are moving here. They are coming in paying 500k in cash. I'm in my mid 30s and make above the median salary for someone in my city and in the country and there are not many affordable houses. I've gotten in a few conversations with these boomers and they are just like work harder or get your parents to help you. They honestly have no idea how good they had/have it. They are very selfish. They always have luxury SUVs. They did not work any harder than anyone else.

    • @Peter-uo9km
      @Peter-uo9km Год назад

      Actually. I've worked with quite a few boomers before and can honestly say that SOME of them perhaps did worker harder than us.

    • @_hector__
      @_hector__ Год назад +2

      ​​@@Peter-uo9km So, exceptions
      Your comment literally doesnt matter because we can also point out younger people who for example work 14 hours a day 6 days a week
      Because they exist

  • @katietalcott6890
    @katietalcott6890 Месяц назад +1

    lives portrayed on social media gaslit GenZ into believing they’re not worthy if they can’t afford rent alone or own a home & drive a new car 😢 In the 90’s 20-30 year olds had 3+ roommates, often shared a car, ate top ramen daily, worked a ton & played hard…it was the best! but we weren’t judged on how we were finding our way. Don’t give up GenZ.. you’re funny, creative & smart. I’m 53 and all that matters now is family & friends… you WILL find your way 💕

  • @traderdan85
    @traderdan85 Год назад +39

    As a gen x car guy you are right .. I’ve seen many of my friends be financially drained by car payments and college , learn a trade , drive a clunker.. NEVER purchase a depreciating asset ( latest tech anything ) on payments
    You’ll be free of debt

    • @Dbb27
      @Dbb27 Год назад +3

      $700 a month in car payments. Good grief! Who could afford that?

    • @killallusionmedia6340
      @killallusionmedia6340 Год назад +4

      Im 21 and have only had cars older than me, funny thing is if you know where to look these 25+ yo cars are just as reliable as new ones,and parts are usually cheaper. just gotta know what to look for, but then again the majority of the population wont know that like we do

    • @Dbb27
      @Dbb27 Год назад

      @@killallusionmedia6340 you make a very good point. I’m getting near needing another car. I’m really debating whether to get a year old or older. Chevy replaced my pistons due to a recall and my 2013 Equinox runs like a top. 160k and running like a beast. I’m driving it until it croaks.
      But I make 800 mile trips so a little wary of keeping it. The new cars are a little scary; too much tech.
      I think I’m going to listen to your 21 year old wisdom. 👍 You just proved you can teach an old dog new tricks. 😎

    • @cheryllee81
      @cheryllee81 5 месяцев назад

      I believe unless you're wealthy, you should NEVER take out a car loan to buy a new car!

    • @aprils.r8418
      @aprils.r8418 Месяц назад

      Trade schools are expensive now and clunkers are around 5k plus.

  • @LoiteringReaper
    @LoiteringReaper Год назад +43

    I think the biggest two factors to increased home prices is seeing homes as investment to earn money and the lack of cheaper single family unit homes.

    • @loverrlee
      @loverrlee Год назад +12

      It’s artificial inflation. Everyone is snatching up property to flip it, but in reality those homes are worth less than they were when the original owner bought it. Houses rot. They need costly repairs. So it’s always been ridiculous to me to think someone can actually sell a used product for MORE than they paid for it. It’s like people convinced buying used toilet paper is a good idea…

    • @zwatwashdc
      @zwatwashdc Год назад

      I get so triggered when people don’t recognize that the government strategy to get the chattering classes (aka, asset owning classes) to support their Covid mandates was to print money and heap it on white collar workers with substantial real estate and stock market holdings. Do millennials and zoomers have any inkling how much richer rich boomers and silents got during Covid?!?

  • @illneumatik
    @illneumatik Год назад +67

    My mom was passed down a house my grandmother gave her before she died....
    20 years ago my homie who was 17 telling my mom this advice rent it out...
    Instead she got two different mortgages in early 2000s th3n wen back in 2008 get that stupid Ballon adjustable Rate....
    Ended owing more money then it worth.....from 100,000 to 200,000 mortgage payments went past what she was making a month we lost that house...it was in family since 1933...
    If your parents did that for us generation x we are paying for there debts...
    We don't have the purchase power now.......
    Our parents fucked us outta of Inheritance houses....
    Because of there greed
    What parents did back then affects are whole life now...
    Baby boomers never thought about us in future....

    • @shootermcgavin4999
      @shootermcgavin4999 Год назад +21

      My parents inherited like 800k or something crazy in 1983 money. That's probably like 3 million or something now. None of us kids got our college paid for and were were basically on our own after 18. They somehow spent it all without investing and now us 3 kids are struggling to even be able to afford a house in our 30s.

    • @shootermcgavin4999
      @shootermcgavin4999 Год назад

      and they had rentals given to them that they sold. The baby boomers were selfish and didn't save to maybe help with future generations.

    • @jednorth6924
      @jednorth6924 Год назад +4

      ​@shootermcgavin4999
      My parents had the attitude that we should make it ourselves. Part of me was upset, but I understood the lesson they were trying to teach. Greed, maybe. I always looked at it as, "it isn't mine, I didn't earn it"
      🤷‍♂️

    • @ushiwaka1956
      @ushiwaka1956 Год назад

      @@shootermcgavin4999 They didn’t buy any long-term assets? Not even another house?

    • @shootermcgavin4999
      @shootermcgavin4999 Год назад

      @@ushiwaka1956 Manufactured home lol. A small amount of property but in a trashy area.