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The biggest long-term story in the US economy is the generational divide between Baby Boomers and millennials. The Boomers, born in the wake of World War II with birth dates spanning roughly 1946 ...
Generation X (often shortened to Gen X) is the demographic cohort following the Baby Boomers and preceding Millennials.Researchers and popular media often use the mid-1960s as its starting birth years and the late 1970s as its ending birth years, with the generation generally defined as people born from 1965 to 1980.
Baby Boomers have been often ascribed as technology resistant, and slower to adopt computers and smart phones than more recent generations who have grown up with them. This has created a sharp divide in how Boomers and modern generations see and interact with the world, including relationships, consumption of media, news sources, and spending ...
Authors William Strauss and Neil Howe, who created the Strauss–Howe generational theory, coined the term 'millennial' in 1987. [15] [16] because the oldest members of this demographic cohort came of age at around the turn of the third millennium A.D. [17] They wrote about the cohort in their books Generations: The History of America's Future, 1584 to 2069 (1991) [18] and Millennials Rising ...
Members of Gen Beta, for short, will be the children of younger millennials and older Gen Zers and by 2035, ... Baby Boomers: 1946-1964 (age 61-79) Generation X: 1965-1979 ...
To tap into generational wisdom, I asked millennial, Gen X and baby boomer financial experts about their early 20s and how the economic landscape resembled or differed from today’s.
The majority of Joneses reached maturity from 1972 to 1979, while younger members came of age from 1980 to 1983, just as the older Baby Boomers had come of age from 1964 to 1971. The name "Generation Jones" has several connotations, including a large anonymous generation, a " keeping up with the Joneses " competitiveness and the slang word ...
Baby boomers didn't all benefit from free education, and not all millennials are struggling to buy a home. Millennials, Gen X, Gen Z, baby boomers: how generation labels cloud issues of inequality ...