Summary

38% of Gen Z adults, under 27, report experiencing a “midlife crisis” due to financial instability, mental health struggles, and career uncertainty.

Financial stress, cited by 30%, stems from rising living costs, stagnant wages, and unattainable milestones like homeownership.

Mental health challenges and career difficulties further compound the crisis. Many turn to “doom-spending” on non-essentials for escapism, worsening financial pressures.

Experts urge older generations to provide practical financial guidance to empower Gen Z and help them achieve long-term stability and growth.

  • CaptDust
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    5 days ago

    As a midlife millennial experiencing financial instability, mental health struggles and career uncertainty - can relate and don’t blame these kids in the slightest.

    Wish I could say things get better, but I lack supporting evidence. Experience what happiness you can with what you have.

    • pelespirit
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      5 days ago

      You’re only 2% behind them. It’s every generation by the way that’s having issues. I bet boomers and gen x are having less but similar numbers. This is a class issue, not a generational one.

      According to a survey conducted by Arta, a staggering 30% of Gen Z respondents identified financial issues as their primary source of stress. Millennials, aged 28 to 43, echoed similar concerns, with 28% citing money as their biggest challenge.

      • CaptDust
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        5 days ago

        Yeah, basically right. I had a joke written that I’m calling dibs on publishing this survey for the next generation, but the thought depressed me out of posting it.

    • stoly@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      This has been going on since mid GenX, believe it or not–the Boomers were the last group to be able to just get in and work a job. It wasn’t until the Millenials, however, that people started talking about it instead of just accepting it as normal.