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ScienceGrump's avatar

This is just the classic happiness u-curve. People in their forties always report the lowest happiness and highest anxiety. Holds true across time and across countries and seems to be an almost universal feature of modern humans. I know everyone loves an article about how [my generation] has it uniquely bad, but millennials are financially better off than Xers were at their age, who were better off than the Boomers, and Zoomers will be better off than we a when they get to our age.

Two questions to always ask about demographic claims: is this an age or a cohort effect? And is this a global or American effect?

Anu | Happy Landings's avatar

I do think that the cost of living stuff is a lot more impactful on millennials vs Gen X right now. I’m a millennial and happen to be friends with a fair number of Gen Xers and they’re just at a different stage of life even if they have kids etc. At least in my liberal, well-off bubble, 50+ year olds are sitting on substantial nest eggs, nearly paid off houses etc. Millenials are still in what Corinne Law calls “the squeeze” - that period of time when both demands from family life (young kids who need a lot of time from you) and work (aggressive work demands on time) pile on top of each other. Add things like childcare, commute and housing costs rising and it does feel like a recipe for stress. The squeeze is supposed to ease at ages 40+ so many younger millennials are probably in the thick of it, plus exact timing depends on when you had kids so likely some 40+ year olds too.

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