Even those who look like they've made it -- shielded by traditional leaning Instagram profiles, steady jobs, travel photos, maybe even a house in a quiet middle-class neighborhood. But quietly, every month, help arrives: a check from mom, a mortgage co-sign, a Venmo for groceries.
There's a growing economic crisis no one wants to talk about. Entire generations -- Millennials and Gen Z -- who are supposed to be in the prime of their careers, building savings, starting families, and living like their parents did at this age, are instead blowing through what would have been their inheritance just to keep the illusion alive. Or worse, just to survive.
But what about the ones who don't have help? Those whose parents can't send anything, or aren't around to try? They're not faking stability, they're fighting collapse. They're crashing on couches, living with three roommates in overpriced apartments, moving back home with kids in tow, or slipping into homelessness while still working full time jobs. The illusion only exists if someone can afford to fund it.
What the Numbers Really Show
Real incomes for young adults are flat and even falling compared to previous generations. Research shows that each generations median wage at a given time is lower than the generation before it. Although Millennials' household incomes at ages 36-40 are still 18% higher than Gen X's were at the same time, the rate of progress has slowed dramatically in recent decades while wages have failed to meet inflation.
https://www.lincolnsquare.media/p/subsidized-survival-the-millennial