Culture Gen Z Is Splurging on Luxury Goods to Soothe Their Economic Despair - For younger generations, financial goals like buying a house and saving for retirement can feel out of reach.

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Gen Z Is Splurging on Luxury Goods to Soothe Their Economic Despair​

For younger generations, financial goals like buying a house and saving for retirement can feel out of reach.​

Bloomberg Paulina Cachero

What really matters anyway?

That’s what Nia Holland, 24, thought after spending $2,500 on a vintage Chanel bag, draining her savings. Earning little money with campus research jobs during graduate school, she knew her money could be better spent, saved or invested.

But at the same time, she said it didn’t feel irresponsible. With traditional milestones — like homeownership and a life with kids — so far out of reach, denying herself “little luxuries” wasn’t going to make a difference. And if anything, the lambskin tote with a 24-carat chain made her feel better.

“The economy sucks, there’s global warming, there’s constant political and social unrest globally,” said Holland, who is getting financial support from her family as she pursues a doctorate in education and psychology at the University of Michigan. “It’s just easier to spend money on things that will bring you immediate fulfillment.”

Typically, when people are on shaky ground economically, they pull back on spending. But, increasingly, younger generations are doing the opposite, figuring their financial futures are doomed no matter what. Higher student debt loads, an increased cost of living and shifts in the labor market have made it more difficult to achieve financial goals, like buying a house or saving for retirement.

As such, about 27% of Americans admit to “doom spending” to cope with concerns about the economy and foreign affairs, according to Credit Karma, a personal finance company. And the rates are even higher among Millennials and Gen Z, at 43% and 35% respectively.

“It’s a way to cope — albeit not the healthiest one,” said Courtney Alev, a consumer financial advocate at Credit Karma.

Fatalistic Tendencies​

While doom spending may capture the economic zeitgeist of the day, the habit is hardly new. Stephen Wu, an economics professor at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York, published research in 2004, writing that those who feel luck and other outside factors play a significant role in their financial success are less likely save.

He argues feelings of fatalism and counterintuitive spending habits have become more common in recent years, particularly after the pandemic and Great Recession. That’s when people began to realize that “a large part of their successes and failures were out of their control,” Wu said.

How younger generations are able to swing big-ticket purchases may also come down to increased parental support. With nearly half of young people living at home, some are using the extra disposable income to treat themselves. It can be easy to think that’s reasonable too when social media is littered with images of young people splashing out on lavish meals, glamorous vacations and designer goods.

If one isn’t careful, however, doom spending can be a self-fulfilling prophecy, where the risk of living paycheck to paycheck is much higher.

That’s the case for Adrian Siega, 26, who recently spent the last of his emergency savings to buy an imitation of a Burberry tote that was featured on the popular HBO show “Succession.”

Siega moved to New York from the Philippines in 2019, with the goal of getting into college, finding a job and buying a home. But as time has gone by, he’s felt his dreams of homeownership slipping out of reach. While he hopes to finally go to college this year, he’s still living with his mom and receiving financial support.

“Thirty years ago, an apartment in Elmhurst was $90,000, and now it’s $400,000 for a one bedroom; that’s insane,” said Siega, a personal care assistant. So for now, he’s focused on what’s “needed for the moment” — skin care products, a pea coat and a knockoff Hermès 35cm Birkin Gold Togo bag for $1,088.

A Different Path​

Costly purchases can seem misguided. But if a person has given up on the dream of a suburban life with kids, that’s not necessarily the case, said Maria Melchor, a 27-year-old content creator focused on financial education for Gen Z.

In a TikTok with more than 1.8 million views, the Yale graduate says that when older people ask how young people can afford things they never buy for themselves, she says it’s because they can’t afford anything else.

“Homeownership or starting a family is so out of reach that we’re using that down payment or kid money on whatever it is we can afford that will bring us semblance of the kind of adulthood we were promised,” she says in the video.

In an interview, she said she wouldn’t classify Gen Z’s indulgence in luxury items as doom spending. Rather, it’s a glimpse into what life could look like for more people, if not all their money was spent on real estate and children. Marriage and birth rates are in decline and remote work, at least for some, opened up the possibility of not being tied down to a single zip code.

“I think the ‘dream’ is changing,” she said.
 
If I see people with luxury goods, I automatically assume they're poor, but are trying to look well-off; wealthy people with taste don't use those products. There's so many knock-offs that the actual product's value is devalued. It's the equivalent of renting a Mercedes and showing it off in your driveway to look like you're keeping up with the Joneses, but are at the same time drowning in debt.

$2,500 on a vintage Chanel bag
Which isn't even good quality. I don't care about these people spending their money on luxury goods since it's not my problem. I'm saying they should have plunked down on a well-made full grain leather bag that will last decades of regular use.

That’s the case for Adrian Siega, 26, who recently spent the last of his emergency savings to buy an imitation of a Burberry tote that was featured on the popular HBO show “Succession.”

Siega moved to New York from the Philippines in 2019...
What a retard. The Philippines has a ton of dirt-cheap counterfeit bags (child labor, the proximity to China, and all), instead of spending several hundred dollars for another knock-off.
 
In my state, a rotting single wall 2 bedroom shack built in the 1950s and an hour commute from any job starts at $750,000. If it wasn't so damn expensive to just keep myself fed, sheltered and my car running, damn straight I would buy some useless distractions too.

*Cue the atomized bootstraps mentality Boomer telling me to move.*
Sorry, I love my family and my roots. All the fucking rich Californians who fled here the past 20 years can leave before I do.
 
That girl at the beginning is a grad student. Chanel bag funded by student loans which she'll be demanding forgiveness on.

Newsflash dumbass journo: I knew plenty of people who did stuff like this when I went to college forever ago. It's just bad money management. I know for a fact a great quality purse, without going full retard, can be had for like 4-5hundro.
 
Home ownership is fully attainable, just not instantantly and not when you buy inane trinkets.
Depends where you live. Imagine growing up in Hawaii or something and wanting to be next to family. You would be utterly fucked.

Some states are straight up unaffordable to 99% of people. Colorado/New York/California etc
 
meh these poor kids were filled with both nihilism and consumerism by their teachers through out their lives so it's no wonder that they have no thought for their future selves.

Save money? Why the revolution will make all money obsolete.

Save money? Why the world will crash and burn before I get any chance to retire, better to spend it now and enjoy my life.

Save money? Fuck that! I don't support the western patriarchal capitalistic systems! Sent from my iPhone using Starbucks WiFi.

It's just another excuse to not think about the future and remain children chasing fleeting pleasure at the expense of later.
 
>Complains about not being able to buy a home
>Buys a leather pouch for thousands.

Sloth and greed. Call it what it is.

Home ownership is fully attainable, just not instantantly and not when you buy inane trinkets.

This whole narrative just pisses me off.
In 1900 you could buy an acre for a deer pelt.

My grandfather bought an expensive home and put all of his kids through college on a currently minimum wage job.
They didn't need scholarships or loans either, he paid up front.

Home ownership as a goal is a sign of slavery.
 
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if I had really scraped I probably could have gotten a down payment on a house during this stretch I was doing really good around ten years ago
which would mean now I'd be desperate to sell before skyrocketing insurance costs totally bankrupted me
 
Depends where you live. Imagine growing up in Hawaii or something and wanting to be next to family. You would be utterly fucked.

Some states are straight up unaffordable to 99% of people. Colorado/New York/California etc
Still not got a lot of sympathy really.

Move. Migrate. People have done this throughout history because they couldn't settle where they were raised. It isn't fun but if you're set on a house you make it happen.

Is it fair? Not at all but that's how it is. If you don't want to move? Put up with living with family or renting then. It would be nice if it could be otherwise if you live in a nice place, but settled communities and raising your kids where you were is no longer a thing in first world economies. It would be nice if they were, but that time has long since gone and isn't coming back. You live where you can afford.

As for what you could buy on the 1900s so what? That was then, this is now. You missed the boat, what a shame. Other ways to make it happen.
 
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As for what you could buy on the 1900s so what? That was then, this is now. You missed the boat, what a shame. Other ways to make it happen.
You will never retire.

Today is different than yesterday, but yesterday was better.

Why was yesterday better? How did land prices skyrocket in 60 years?
 
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With traditional milestones — like homeownership and a life with kids — so far out of reach, denying herself “little luxuries” wasn’t going to make a difference. And if anything, the lambskin tote with a 24-carat chain made her feel better.

“The economy sucks, there’s global warming, there’s constant political and social unrest globally,” said Holland, who is getting financial support from her family as she pursues a doctorate in education and psychology at the University of Michigan. “It’s just easier to spend money on things that will bring you immediate fulfillment.”
Hmmm it's almost like this is exactly what The Powers That Be want - a consumer for life, spending their existence making money and spending it on "little luxuries" without actually accumulating any wealth in order to better their position in life and build a future.

Really eerie.
:thinking:
 
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