Younger Generations Lag Parents in Building Wealth

Julius Skrrvin

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http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/15/b...lag-parents-in-wealth-building.html?hpw&_r=1&

WASHINGTON — Pearl Brady has a stable job with good benefits and holds two degrees, a bachelor’s and a master’s. But despite her best efforts, she has no savings, and worries that it will be years before she manages to start putting away money for a house, children and eventually retirement.


Pearl Brady of Brooklyn worries that it will be years before she will be able to put money away

“I’m in that extremely nervous category,” said Ms. Brady, 28, a Brooklynite who works for a union. “I know how much money I’m going to be making for the near term. I hope in my 30s and 40s to be able to save, but I have no idea how. It’s scary.”

Ms. Brady has plenty of company. A new study from the Urban Institute finds that Ms. Brady and her peers up to roughly age 40 have accrued less wealth than their parents did at the same age, even as the average wealth of Americans has doubled over the last quarter-century.
:damn:
Because wealth compounds over long periods of time — a dollar saved 10 years ago is worth much more than a dollar saved today — young adults probably face less secure futures for decades down the road, and even shakier retirements.

“In this country, the expectation is that every generation does better than the previous generation,” said Caroline Ratcliffe, an author of the study. “This is no longer the case. This generation might have less.” The authors said the situation facing young Americans might be unprecedented.

A broad range of economic factors has conspired to suppress wealth-building for younger American workers; the trend predates the Great Recession. Younger Americans are facing stagnant pay — the median income, when adjusted for inflation, has declined since its 1999 peak — as well as a housing collapse and soaring student loan debt.:wow:

In interviews, a half-dozen young adults — men and women, with families and single, in a broad range of industries — described economic conditions that left them just barely keeping their heads above water.

Ms. Brady, for instance, earns about $1,800 a month in take-home pay. But she paid for her undergraduate and graduate education in part with loans, which cost her about $400 a month. She also is trying to pay down her credit card debt, which requires about $500 a month. After food, rent and living expenses, there is little left over.

Looking forward, she said, it seemed hard to imagine building a nest egg. “Realistically, my income will go up, but not at a rate that’s going to match my expenses,” Ms. Brady said. “I feel like every step forward I take, it’s three steps back.”

Chuck Ross, 31, has a master’s in economics and at one point built up a $12,000 nest egg from investing. But he lives in Wichita, Kan., where jobs in his field are few. He works at a large chain restaurant and is struggling with $40,000 in student loans. “My dad works for himself,” he said. “He’s always joking about how he’ll work until he dies. We laugh, but for me, that’s becoming more and more of a thought.”

Others said they had put their money into a home only to fall into foreclosure, or were struggling to pay for child care.

Strong and sustained job and wage growth would cure many of the ills facing younger workers, experts said. But their delayed or diminished wealth accumulation might still have a lasting impact on their finances.

“It’s a little bit of a tipping-point moment,” said Signe-Mary McKernan, an author of the study from the Urban Institute, a nonprofit Washington research institution. “If we don’t address it today, they might never catch up.”

For instance, the researchers said, if a person delayed the purchase of a home to age 40 instead of buying at age 30, that might result in a $42,000 loss in home equity by the time she reaches 60, given trends in wealth accumulation over the past few decades.

The Urban Institute study is one of many to show something of a perfect storm of economic trends battering younger workers. One is the collapse of the housing bubble. Young people who bought homes as prices started to decline in 2006 are often underwater on their mortgages today. But now that prices have fallen sharply and interest rates are remarkably low, many other young adults are locked out of the market because credit standards are tougher.:pav:

A second major trend is the rise of student loan debt, which has continued to grow through the recession, sometimes saddling students with burdens that extend into six figures and might take decades to pay down. A study of Federal Reserve data by the Pew Research Center found that 40 percent of relatively young households had outstanding student debt as of 2010, up from 34 percent in 2007. The median balance among all households with student loan debt was more than $13,000. :wow:

“I just don’t think about it,” said Mr. Ross, of his student loans. “I push the thoughts out of my mind, and when I do think about it now and then I kind of just think that maybe I’ll have to work indefinitely. And I hope I can find a career that will allow my body to do that.”

Finally, and perhaps most important, younger workers have faced a brutal job market in the last half-decade. The unemployment rate is 7.8 percent for workers between the ages of 25 and 34; it hovered over 10 percent for more than a year during the recession and early stages of the recovery. For workers between the ages of 45 and 54, the unemployment rate is 5.5 percent, and it peaked at 8 percent in 2010.:damn:

Those who held on to their jobs are often worse off. Wages, adjusted for inflation, have stagnated for a broad swath of workers for over a decade. For millions of workers, wages have actually declined through the recession and the sluggish recovery.

With the wage and jobs picture bleak, and fixed pensions largely gone from the private sector, the answer to the conundrum of shoring up savings for younger workers might lie in new government policies, the Urban Institute scholars said. They suggested encouraging retirement accounts by making them automatic unless an employee opted out, or modifying the home mortgage interest deduction to push more money toward homeownership for lower-income workers.

For now, millions of younger workers are on their own. “We both had vanilla lower-middle-to-middle-class lifestyles,” said Christopher Greer, a 32-year-old who works in astronomy and lives in Arizona, referring to himself and his girlfriend. “I’m not sure how that’s going to play out for us.”

:sadcam::sadcam::sadcam:
 

TYBG

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I'm sick of always reading the articles and they quick to point out that the student has an economics degree or MBA:skip: bytch ass nikka came from a no name school, low gpa, no professional designation/license.

40k in debt but didn't look at the ROI:huhldup: You have to be realistic on what your earning will be in the future.
 

acri1

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We inherited the shyttiest economy since the great depression. What else would you expect? :to:
 
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I'm sick of always reading the articles and they quick to point out that the student has an economics degree or MBA:skip: bytch ass nikka came from a no name school, low gpa, no professional designation/license.

40k in debt but didn't look at the ROI:huhldup: You have to be realistic on what your earning will be in the future.

I think you missed the entire point
 

mson

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I got 40k in the savings, 20k in the checking, another 20k in mutual funds and 25k in the 401k. I don't have any debt, I got great credit and around 6k in stocks. I'm doing alright.
 

Serious

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I'm sick of always reading the articles and they quick to point out that the student has an economics degree or MBA:skip: bytch ass nikka came from a no name school, low gpa, no professional designation/license.

40k in debt but didn't look at the ROI:huhldup: You have to be realistic on what your earning will be in the future.

:whoa::whoa::whoa:


That shouldn't be the point. Everyone should have the option of having a job that pays "liveable" wages.

That's why most people go to school anyways...

If everyone went into "accounting" then your field would be saturated as well...

With that said, I see little positivity coming from putting people in debt, trying to "educate" themselves and better their life. It's hustling backwards in a sense...

Also 13,000 in debt isn't alot. I'd probably be able to knock that out in a year and a half tops.
 

TYBG

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:whoa::whoa::whoa:


That shouldn't be the point. Everyone should have the option of having a job that pays "liveable" wages.

That's why most people go to school anyways...

If everyone went into "accounting" then your field would be saturated as well...

With that said, I see little positivity coming from putting people in debt, trying to "educate" themselves and better their life. It's hustling backwards in a sense...

Also 13,000 in debt isn't alot. I'd probably be able to knock that out in a year and a half tops.
His loan is 40k breh. There's more to the story with alot of these folks. A couple weeks ago, there was an article about some chick who is 100k in debt for an art degree working as a receptionist at a law firm:wtf: Alot of people pull out extra money for other "expenses" sometimes:mjpls: Can't build wealth if you don't have your priorities straight.

I'm just saying though, every week there's articles (wealth accumulation, age discrimination, etc) or side stories about student X has an MBA or economics degree. They don't go into further details about their GPA or school they come from. Articles ALWAYS trying to insinuate a business degree alone should automatically guarantee a job too.
 

Aviso

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How does Pearl Brady have a bachelors AND a masters degree and only make about $1800 in take home pay? :what:
 

No_bammer_weed

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His loan is 40k breh. There's more to the story with alot of these folks. A couple weeks ago, there was an article about some chick who is 100k in debt for an art degree working as a receptionist at a law firm:wtf: Alot of people pull out extra money for other "expenses" sometimes:mjpls: Can't build wealth if you don't have your priorities straight.

I'm just saying though, every week there's articles (wealth accumulation, age discrimination, etc) or side stories about student X has an MBA or economics degree. They don't go into further details about their GPA or school they come from. Articles ALWAYS trying to insinuate a business degree alone should automatically guarantee a job too.

The video below illustrates the amount of wealth that the average american operates with. Basically, in order to make it, it takes a modicum of preparation, and a whole boat load of luck. Stop acting like there is a by the numbers rubric that one can orient, in order to make it in these current economic times. The system is set up for the average American to fail, no matter the approach. Want a relatively foolproof way to success in todays America? Be born into wealth. If not, you're likely ass out.

 
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Serious

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His loan is 40k breh. There's more to the story with alot of these folks. A couple weeks ago, there was an article about some chick who is 100k in debt for an art degree working as a receptionist at a law firm:wtf: Alot of people pull out extra money for other "expenses" sometimes:mjpls: Can't build wealth if you don't have your priorities straight.

I'm just saying though, every week there's articles (wealth accumulation, age discrimination, etc) or side stories about student X has an MBA or economics degree. They don't go into further details about their GPA or school they come from. Articles ALWAYS trying to insinuate a business degree alone should automatically guarantee a job too.

Trust I see what you saying, but I just think that higher education should be free at this point. I'm tired of hearing about astronomical student loans. Certainly an educated populous will do more good than harm. Plus let's not act like these for-profit institutes aren't incredibly overpriced, as well as the main ones leading the charge for student loan defaults.

Once again, it's almost like hustling backwards to get "ahead".
 

the cac mamba

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I got 40k in the savings, 20k in the checking, another 20k in mutual funds and 25k in the 401k. I don't have any debt, I got great credit and around 6k in stocks. I'm doing alright.

:win: how old are you breh
 

Atlrocafella

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Student loan and credit card debt is really killing us though. I've been knocking off one debt at a time, an still saving at the same time, but it's definitely hard.
 
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