Just Call Us Generation Rent

Young Americans are commitment-phobes, or so we’ve been told.

Today’s 20-to-34-year-olds (myself included) are reluctant to make big purchases or life decisions that depend on a financially secure future, Bloomberg News reports. Instead, we’re renting everything from apartments to cars to clothes. We’re postponing marriage. We’re more likely to move back in with our parents. Some of us are choosing to go to grad school instead of facing the job market.

It seems the only thing tied to many young adults is their share of the about $1 trillion student-loan debt.

Why shouldn’t we be cautious? Young adults are facing an unemployment rate that’s been above 8 percent since 2009. The median first-job salary has gone down $3,000 since 2007, from $30,000 to $27,000. More young adults are taking internships or temporary jobs — the percentage of the U.S. workforce in temporary jobs is at a five-year high, 1.91 percent.

Commitment phobia isn’t a fad. For most, it’s an economic reality. Renting isn’t a choice when you can’t afford to buy, or qualify for a loan, or count on being in the same job for more than a few months.

Rest here…

~

4closureFraud.org