US Why Gen X is the real loser generation - Don’t cry for millennials or Gen Z. Save your pity for those in their 50s, Poor Slackers.

https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2025/05/08/why-gen-x-is-the-real-loser-generation
https://archive.ph/tAuom
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“We suffer”, said Seneca, “more often in imagination than in reality.” The Stoic philosopher could have been talking about the generations. Members of Gen Z, born between 1997 and 2012, say that social media ruined their childhood. Millennials, between 1981 and 1996, complain that they cannot buy a house. Baby-boomers, between 1946 and 1964, grouse that they face an uncertain retirement.

Many forget about Generation X, which is made up of those born between 1965 and 1980. Proxied by Google searches the world is less than half as interested in Gen X as it is in millennials, Gen Zers or baby-boomers. There are few podcasts or memes about Gen X. Aside from Douglas Coupland’s “Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture”, a novel published in 1991 which popularised the moniker, there are few books discussing the cohort. In Britain Gen Xers are less likely than members of any other age group to know the generation to which they belong.

Gen Xers may have no place in the popular imagination but, contrary to Seneca, they really do suffer. This is true both because Gen Xers are at a tricky age, and also because the cohort itself is cursed.

A recent 30-country poll by Ipsos finds that 31% of Gen Xers say they are “not very happy” or “not happy at all”, the most of any generation. David Blanchflower of Dartmouth College finds all sorts of nasty things, from unhappiness to anxiety to despair, top out around the age of 50. This is consistent with the “U-bend of life” theory, which suggests that people are happy when young and old, but miserable in middle age. Baby-boomers went through it; before long millennials will, too.

The U-bend exists in part because chronic health issues start to emerge in middle age. People also come to realise they will not achieve everything they had hoped in their careers. On top of this, Gen Xers often have to look after both their children and their parents. In America they devote 5% of their spending to caring for people under 18 or over 65, against just 2% for boomers. In Italy the share of 18-to-34-year-olds living with their parents has increased from 61% to 68% over the past two decades. In Spain the rise is even more dramatic. To which generation do many of these parents belong? Gen X.

Nowhere is life more U-shaped than in San Francisco. The city’s idealistic youngsters believe that they will start the next big artificial-intelligence company, and are willing to put up with high costs and crime. Successful boomers live in enormous houses in Pacific Heights and sit on company boards. Gen Xers, in the middle, have neither the idealism nor the sinecures. Only 37% are happy with life in San Francisco, compared with 63% of Gen Zers, according to a poll in 2022 by the San Francisco Standard, a local paper. Many have little option but to live in Oakland—the horror!—if they want a big house.

Although Gen Xers will in time escape the U-bend, they will remain losers in other ways. Consider their incomes. Gen Xers do earn more after inflation than earlier generations—the continuation of a long historical trend, and one from which both millennials and Gen Zers also benefit. But their progress has been slow. A recent paper by Kevin Corinth of the American Enterprise Institute, a think-tank, and Jeff Larrimore of the Federal Reserve assesses American household incomes by generation, after accounting for taxes, government transfers and inflation. From the ages of 36 to 40 Gen Xers’ real household incomes were only 16% higher than the previous generation at the same age, the smallest improvement of any cohort (see chart 1).
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Perhaps this poor income growth is a consequence of a stereotype that a range of psychological studies have confirmed: Gen Xers are reluctant to be corporate drones, placing more emphasis on work-life balance and autonomy. It is no coincidence that in 1999, when Gen Xers were in the prime of their lives, there were two hugely successful films in which people broke free of life’s shackles. In “The Matrix” Thomas Anderson, a computer programmer, discovers the world is an illusion simulated by intelligent machines. In “Fight Club” an office worker joins a secret society whose members kick lumps out of each other. All very exciting, of course—but hardly conducive to a solid career.

Gen Xers have, to be fair, faced difficult circumstances. People’s earnings typically rise fast in their 30s and 40s, as they move into managerial roles. Unfortunately for Gen Xers, when they were in that age range labour markets were weak, following the global financial crisis of 2007-09. In 2011, for instance, the median nominal earnings of British people in their 30s rose by just 1.1%. Earnings growth in Italy, which was hit hard by the euro crisis, was just as poor. And in Canada from 2011 to 2017 the real median earnings of people aged 35 to 44 years did not grow at all.

Gen Xers have also done a poor job accumulating wealth. During the 1980s, when many boomers were in their 30s, global stockmarkets quadrupled. Millennials, now in their 30s, have so far enjoyed strong market returns. But during the 2000s, when Gen Xers were hoping to make hay, markets fell slightly. That period was a lost decade for American stocks in particular, coming after the dotcom bubble and ending with the financial crisis.

What about home-ownership, the ultimate symbol of intergenerational unfairness? The conventional narrative contrasts perma-renting millennials with boomers who enjoy six spare bedrooms. Yet data on American home-ownership, provided by Victoria Gregory of the St Louis branch of the Fed, overturns this received wisdom. In fact, the big decline in home-ownership rates happened from boomers to Gen Xers. Starting in their late 30s and early 40s, Gen Xers of a given age had a similar chance of owning as millennials do (see chart 2).

Aversion to home-ownership is in some cases a choice. Gen Xers may have imbibed a passage from Mr Coupland’s novel: “When someone tells you they’ve just bought a house, they might as well tell you they no longer have a personality.” But, again, circumstances are probably a bigger factor. From their late 30s to their early 40s, the time when many people first get on the housing ladder, Gen Xers suffered from the effects of the financial crisis. It became hard to get a mortgage. Some of those who already had one foreclosed on their house and went back to renting.

Aggregate statistics capture all these trends. Jeremy Horpedahl of the University of Central Arkansas tracks average wealth by generation, using data produced by the Fed. He finds that, at 31, the millennial/Gen Z cohort has about double the wealth that the average Gen Xer had at the same age. Using survey data from the European Central Bank we find suggestive evidence of similar trends in Europe. From 2010 to 2021, millennials in the euro area tripled their nominal net worth, versus less than a doubling for Gen Xers.

The position of Gen Xers may not improve much in the years ahead. They could be the first to suffer owing to broken pension systems. America’s social-security fund is projected to be depleted by 2033—just as Gen Xers start to retire—meaning benefits will be cut by 20-25% unless Congress acts. Next time you see a quinquagenarian, at least give them a smile. ■
 
has become an actual career for someone who a decade ago would've moved up the ladder.
To be fair to GenX, this is because the boomers refuse to train their successors and retire. You can't move up the ladder when the top rungs are being help up by decrepit old fucks who are dead set on replacing everyone with shitskins because they saw an advertisement for Coca-Cola where people sang a song and decided importing infinite browns was the future.
 
I still wanna know who the assholes who had Christmas like this were.
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That is brought to you by someone who was born between about 1905-1920, who would buy things like pencils and notebook paper and offbrand hot wheels cars from the dollar store, and wrap each thing in an individual shoebox, because they remembered Christmases where there was nothing to give but hard candy and- if you saved up- and orange, during the Depression.

Got some weirdass- but well-intended- presents from those ones in my family.

They were all demented or dead by the time millennials started noticing the world.
 
The worst part is going to be when the millenials and zoomers vote in their idealised communism and never let us inherit the wealth of our boomer parents.
You are forgetting that boomers have no intention of letting you inherit their wealth. They will sell the home via reverse mortgage to fund their nonstop trips to Vegas and cruises. Commies or not, you'll be getting nothing.
 
The worst part is going to be when the millenials and zoomers vote in their idealised communism and never let us inherit the wealth of our boomer parents.

lol what wealth

I'm the happiest gen xer I know and the fact that I'm doing waaaay better than my parents ever did is a major contributing factor
 
Waah, waah! Boo hoo! Woe is me! You Gen Xers are all the same. Millennials got slammed with the worst economic depression since 1929 and then a pandemic manufactured for the express purpose of getting Trump. Do you see them whining about it?

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No, you don't! They pulled themselves up by their bootstraps and kept going like the troopers they are.

The one thing I am dead serious about in this thread is that Nirvana fucking sucks. Overrated hooey with riffs stolen from blues artists. Alice in Chains was the superior PNW rock band and Kurt Cobain was a whiny, edgy faggot. I will give Nirvana full credit for slaughtering hair metal and glam rock, but that's it.


First off millenials are the biggest corpo dicksuckers around.

Secondly I agree with you about Alice in Chains. Their old stuff much more than their new stuff as there really was no replacement for Layne. Jerry Cantrell doesnt get the credit that he deserves as a songwriter/producer.
 
You are forgetting that boomers have no intention of letting you inherit their wealth. They will sell the home via reverse mortgage to fund their nonstop trips to Vegas and cruises. Commies or not, you'll be getting nothing.
This seems like a very American perspective and plan. If I would like to torture my parents trips to Vegas and cruises would be a viable option.
 
First off millenials are the biggest corpo dicksuckers around.
Your mom's box is the biggest corpo dicksucker around, you nuke-hungry sperg. The nuke comment is a reference, don't think about it too hard if you don't get it.
Secondly I agree with you about Alice in Chains. Their old stuff much more than their new stuff as there really was no replacement for Layne. Jerry Cantrell doesnt get the credit that he deserves as a songwriter/producer.
William DuVall isn't bad at all but, yeah, you can't just replace Layne Staley. At least we agree on music.
 
From their late 30s to their early 40s, the time when many people first get on the housing ladder, Gen Xers suffered from the effects of the financial crisis. It became hard to get a mortgage
The elephant in the room is also the increasingly larger waves of culturally alien immigrants from the 70’s through to today, inflating the housing market.

Add to that many Western nations being desirable asset havens for the suddenly-affluent Asian upper classes, especially the Chinese from the start of the new millennium. Housing in the West was seen as a desirable purchase due to good returns, increasing prices and relative illiquidity.

Then came the ‘green revolution’ and increasingly nutty government regulations on how and where and what you could build, and the materials thereof. Governments in many Western countries also discovered that taxing new homes was a great way to offset some of the loses inflicted by importing non-productive ’refugees’.

Governments all over the West are reluctant to admit that Gen X was simply out-competed in the race for scarce housing by decades-long waves of non-white immigrants willing to pool their resources and live four to a bedroom.

They could be the first to suffer owing to broken pension systems
I had to pay for my degree where the boomers got theirs for free.
I’m forced to save for my own retirement while paying taxes that give boomers their pensions.
And when I finally get to retire, the pension system I’ve had huge chunks of my paycheck eaten to pay for, will have nothing in it for me.
And it’s all the boomer’s fault. They ate everything at the table, ordered more on our tabs, stuck Gen X with the bill, and blamed us for not giving them enough grandkids.
 
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Gen X does not get enough hate. Boomers 2.0 but not half as fun, trailblazing, weird, or personable.

I was thinking about this last time I went to Santa Fe. It's still the same leftist, stratified shithole filled with old people it's always been, but it's somehow even worse. It wasn't until I made the mistake of going to a coffee shop that I realized what it was. All the Boomers wearing their hippie cloths they've had since the 60s and talking about communism and their art collective or historical society are dead. Instead, it's all Gen Xers wearing shitty Chinese cloths they bought at REI to look like they are still able to hike talking about communism and where they want to put more faux-adobe condos. You drive around and the small grocery co-ops and import shops and weirdo cranies are gone, now everyone buys their food at the really bougie Sprouts or Trader Joes and even the Kroger is designed to look like a townhouse in New York. Instead of people's yards being filled with sculptures they made or covered in glass they recovered from the wilderness or whatever weird thing you come across, it's all HOA compliant gravel with the mandatory tranny flag. Perfect reflection of Gen X, the eternal reble who doesn't care, but without any of the skills of previous generations and who certainly still care about line going up.
 
As it always has been.
Only issue is standing up for better future or accepting the norm.
 
As an oldfaX I'm annoyed that we're hated so wrongly.

Mostly we're just weird losers of no importance who tend to vote Republican. The good thing we did was make the last popular music that the world will ever truly love. That was a very long time ago. The evil shit is right now.

Corporate wokeshit is all us. It coincided precisely with our ascendance to management. The few among us who have successful professional careers did all of it: troons in naval intelligence, infinite jeets, child porn at school, the whole fucking list. Millennials and later who are in on it are just obeying us.

"Ironically," all that shit originated in the punk scene. Jim Goad's Redneck Manifesto almost tells the story, but he's a boomer, so he doesn't quite get it. Great book.

Occupy Wall Street was the final victory of corporate wokeness, our generational declaration of an already fully accomplished occupation. If you think otherwise, you got gay-opped by old men.

 
That is brought to you by someone who was born between about 1905-1920, who would buy things like pencils and notebook paper and offbrand hot wheels cars from the dollar store, and wrap each thing in an individual shoebox, because they remembered Christmases where there was nothing to give but hard candy and- if you saved up- and orange, during the Depression.

Got some weirdass- but well-intended- presents from those ones in my family.

They were all demented or dead by the time millennials started noticing the world.
True, but I’m not sure that picture is as old as it looks. Sure, that’s Jingle All the Way playing on Disney, so we’re talking ‘97 at least. But there also looks to be a DVD player on the TV, which feels more like early 2000’s. And that bear on the right is a Disney Junior Muppet Baby and they didn’t even have the rights to that until 2004.

Very weird. Someone desperately needs to upgrade their wallpaper tho.
 
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As a Gen Xer, I'll say that we have the most resentment thanks to having to mature right after the Boomers did. We didn't have their numbers, their political representation, or their control of the media. Gen Xers grew up watching Boomer TV every second of the day, because that's all there was on broadcast TV - Boomer nostalgia. Boomer music was on the radio, and God help you if you called it Oldies before the year 2000. We've got a massive chip on our shoulder, because we didn't get the same treatment when it became time to milk our Youth Nostalgia. All we got was Stranger Things and... that's about it.
 
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