If you type in “characteristics of the Millennial generation” into trusty Google you will find a list of interesting headlines. Some of the titles given to Millennials are: Generation Y, Generation WE, The Boomerang Generation, and The Peter Pan Generation. Part of this stems from the way many were raised by baby boomers who were promising their kids the world. Many felt that leaving college with any degree would be enough for a high income and an avalanche of jobs hitting their email box. None of this really materialized. Unrealistically high expectations. Denmark, which typically ranks among the “happiest” countries in the world carries one interesting trait – have low expectations. In fact, most Millennials are struggling in the current economy. The Millennial generation leads the way in the amount of student debt it carries. Many are stuck in low wage jobs earning so little, they are living with their parents deep into adulthood. How broke are Millennials? Pretty broke when you look at the data.

Blame it on income

A very high number of Millennials don’t even work or if they are working, are stuck in a low wage job. Close to half of recent college graduates are working in jobs that don’t even relate to their undergraduate degree. Not a problem when you pay little for college but this can be an issue when you are going into tens of thousands of dollars of debt to finance your studies.

Income for Millennials has fallen across virtually all employment sectors:

It should be noted that the Great Recession officially ended in the summer of 2009 yet somehow, incomes continue to go down for Millennials. This is why younger Americans are angered and keenly focused on issues like income inequality and student debt.

Millennials are the poorest income group in the United States:

This is expected given age and where they stand in their career but the problem is many Millennials are in positions that have little future progression. Millions are stuck in service industry jobs that provide no benefits aside from the immediate wages to pay daily bills.

This also ties into the problems of home buying. Millennials are in their prime home buying age, for some years now, yet somehow home buying isn’t picking up outside of big investors and boomers. So what happens? Millennials live at home.

Living at home

The number of Millennials living at home is staggering:

The number jumped from 27 percent from 1994 to 2008 to nearly 32 percent in recent years. This percentage change represented millions of Millennials. The number is slightly moving lower but this is partly due to some Millennials moving out to form rental households, not in purchasing new properties.

And when you look at their current income level and the typical home price, it is clear that many Millennials shouldn’t be buying homes. Many already carry levels of debt looking like mortgages.

High levels of debt

Millennials already have a massive amount of debt from going to college:

Just look at the debt-to-income ratio for college educated Millennials. It is expected that younger generations start at the lower range of the income scale but in the past, people simply weren’t saddled with ungodly amounts of debt starting off their careers. How broke are Millennials? Much more broke than their baby boomer parents.

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