Alpha Consumer

Young Adults: We're Suffering, Not Thriving

By Kimberly Palmer

Posted: July 6, 2009

Katie Dean, press assistant for the Student Association for Voter Empowerment, didn't agree with some of Suze Orman's strong statements posted in my recent interview with her ("Suze Orman: Why the Recession Is a Good Thing"). She took particular exception to Orman's assertion that today, young people "have it so great it's not even funny." First, Orman's explanation:

If the economy kept running the way it was, you guys would have been broke for the rest of your life. Real estate was going up and up. You would never have qualified for real estate, and companies were shipping jobs offshore. So where were you going to get a job? The price of tuition was so high [that graduates] owed $150,000 in student loans. The price of milk and other prices were so off the charts. What were you people going to do? The stock market was at 14,000, so every time you put money into your 401(k), you bought less and less shares.

Dean thinks otherwise. She writes:

Although the economic overhaul may ultimately be to our advantage, Orman seems to ignore the overwhelmingly negative immediate consequences that young people are facing due to the recession.

While it is true that the few Americans fortunate enough to have a stable financial situation have been able to take advantage of the investment opportunities resulting from the recession, the vast majority of young people are suffering greatly under the economic downturn.

Orman claims that before the recession hit, the economy was growing so rapidly that consumer buying power became weak enough to preclude young people from ever affording real estate or even repaying college loans. I understand Orman's intentions in pointing out that the recession brought an upswing in buying power because, in theory, it should enable young people to afford things which were previously unavailable. However, most young people are not in a situation that allows them to take advantage of this increased buying power and thus Orman's focus on the positive elements of the recession makes her remiss in her analysis.

Dean makes a good point. It's true that young people are suffering right now. The job market is particularly tough for those under age 30, who face a higher-than-average 20 percent unemployment rate. It's hard to argue that young people are thriving right now.

20 year old business owner not thriving

To me the recession isn't a bad thing but then it is. I am 20 I invested my life savings into a small car lot in 2008 right before the recession. Because of the recession I am able to look at buying a small home to fix up and hopefully sell in a better market. Three years ago that would have been less possible. On the flip side, my business relies on local trade-ins from local dealers. Less new cars sold=less trade-ins. My business could be much more profitable if I could sell at a higher volume, but the recession is preventing that. The recession gives me future opportunities (home buying) but to reach those goals in purchasing a home, my current opportunities (my business) need to profitable. Currently, I am not thriving.

Johnny Houseman of MI @ Nov 11, 2009 14:47:23 PM

One other thing

You have the baby boomers selling out these young people's future in the form of massive debt for things like health care programs (all well and good but we can't afford it now, much less keep paying for it), defense spending, etc so they can feel secure when it requires massive amounts of debt that the young people coming out onto the job market now will have pay back in taxes and other things when most of the people that benefit will either be retired or dead. They have no such thing as social security to look forward to. They have to have it now and don't take responsibility for their own lack of retirement or financial planning, its the same mindset and risky behavior that put the economy in the boat its in. People looking at this quarters numbers or what they can get now rather then what it will cost down the road.

David of NC @ Oct 08, 2009 15:56:06 PM

Higher then 20%??

Try higher then 50%

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/the_dead_end_kids_AnwaWNOGqsXMuIlGONNX1K

David of NC @ Oct 08, 2009 15:51:31 PM

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Alpha Consumer

Alpha Consumer

Kimberly Palmer, senior editor for U.S. News & World Report, writes about how to save money, avoid scams, manage debt, and be a savvy shopper. Send your personal finance questions to her for expert money advice.


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