Nobody Is Moving, Especially Millennials (nymag.com) 491
For a fun new entry into millennials are lazy, consider this: According to new data tracked down by Richard Fry for Pew Research, just 20 percent of 25- to 35-year-olds (Old Millennials, if you will) reported having lived at a different address the previous year. From a report on NYMag: In 2000, a full 26 percent of Gen-Xers -- then at the same age range -- had reported making a move in the previous year. In 1963, members of the Silent Generation moved at a 26 percent rate, too. The census data being used here doesn't include college-dorm moves prevalent with 18- to 24-year-olds, so those young'uns are left out of the analysis. The 20 percent rate is the lowest level of young adult mobility in half a century, Fry reports, and all this with millennials getting married, owning homes, and having kids less than previous generations. Student debt and less favorable lending rates may be driving down homeownership -- imagine that -- which further reduces movement. Psychologically, this also means that young adults are more stuck with their personalities and faded of memory compared with their more mobile peers.
moving all the time is dumb (Score:4, Insightful)
sure you might make more money cash wise, but you're going to be a perpetual renter aka sharecropper with nothing to your name
putting down roots means you can buy property at a younger age which means you will pay it off faster and have kids at a younger age. the perpetual movers will be the people having their first kid at 45 and no spare cash from having their rent increase all the time
Re:having kids is dumb (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:having kids is dumb (Score:4, Insightful)
Anyone that has kids has pretty much forfeited their ticket to the good life.
I counter your assertion with the opposite: Anyone who doesn't have kids has forfeited the greatest experiences life has to offer.
I've raised (or am still raising) four kids. The youngest is 15, the oldest 23. They're not perfect kids, by any means. Being a parent has been -- by far -- the most challenging thing I've ever done, and I think I've done some hard things. It's also simultaneously the most heartbreaking and most incredibly rewarding. There's a lot of truth in the idea that the deepest joy to be found in life comes from serving others, and there is no deeper, more thorough, more enduring or more dedicated service than that a parent gives to a child. I don't think the biological link has anything to do with it, either; raising an adopted baby to adulthood would be the same (I didn't do that, but I know several who did raise both biological and adopted children).
What it's about is caring for another human being from the time they're completely helpless until the time they can become independent and succeed on their own, and on their own terms. It's about loving them and building a unique and very human bond. And when I say "unique", I mean that it's different for every parent and child. My relationship with each of my children is very different, because they are very different people. It's about living through their heartbreaks and joys, their failures and victories, and supporting and encouraging them through it all. It's also about teaching them the ways of the world, and about right and wrong and good and bad.
Oh, life certainly has a lot to offer those who don't have children. I've been economically successful enough that my wife and I do a lot of the things that DINKs do and enjoy. We do have the "good life". We have hobbies, we travel and we have nice things, and all of those are good.
But all of those experiences are... shallow. Nothing like the challenges and joys of raising children. I make enough money that I didn't really have to choose, but if I did, knowing what I do, I'd take the kids and give the "good life" a pass.
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you aren't the first people to think that in your 20's. then the 40s hit and it's like that Picard line from Star Trek. "I've realized there are fewer days ahead than there are behind"
Re:having kids is dumb (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:having kids is dumb (Score:5, Insightful)
Being married does not save on taxes.
Not by itself, but there are plenty of opportunities for tax savings, such as-
Low-income + high income salary averaging out to a slightly lower tax rate overall
Low-income partner can take more advantage of Roth retirement plans, maxxing out their plan (up to either the maximum yearly limits, or their own salary, whichever is less).
1 tax return instead of 2, savings on filing costs and time
Transfer of assets tax-free upon the death of one partner in 99% of cases
Benefit shopping between 2 employers, can be used to lower taxes in some cases etc
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Living together (common-law marriage) grants you all the same benefits but on tax day you get to claim your individual deductibles. Additionally, lower income partners could qualify for food stamps and all sorts of government aid while if you're married your combined income usually puts you over the limits. Obviously if you have a partner without income, then you qualify for all sorts of additional tax breaks if you claim them as dependent.
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Being married does not save on taxes.
It does compared to being divorced and paying extortion money via child support to an ex that refuses to work...
heh, ask me how I know.
And before someone says something about the CS comment, I have my kids half the time, but I bear vastly over half their expenses, even after 4 years where their other parent could have gained meaningful employment with the 6! (4x 4.0 AS, 2x 4.0 BS) degrees they have.
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If you are moving around, you are not limited to the opportunities in the area that you are in. No opportunities, no chance to grow, you become a sharecropper. Just take a look at all those company towns that depended upon the one factory in the area for job. Once it left, they had nothing to fall back on.
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Remote IT jobs for miles...
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But I suspect that most people are able to change jobs without having to move, might be an increa
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That's only true of small towns that aren't near a decent sized urban center. Which probably doesn't describe a very significant part of the country.
I'm guessing you don't spend a lot of time outside the city (not an insult)...
Look at a map sometime, every state has hundreds of small towns with 500 or 600 people (or less) geographically distant from anything that could be considered a big or medium sized city.
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sharecropper has always been people who rent their land and tools and never have money to own anything. like the perpetual movers.
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sure you might make more money cash wise, but you're going to be a perpetual renter aka sharecropper with nothing to your name
putting down roots means you can buy property at a younger age which means you will pay it off faster and have kids at a younger age. the perpetual movers will be the people having their first kid at 45 and no spare cash from having their rent increase all the time
Not true at all. You have to recall that all surveys and questionnaires are only valid for the demographic that chooses to participate in surveys or questionnaires.
My family and I have moved for almost every job I have had in the tech sector and we have had 8 children in the last 20 years. No, we don't own a home, but we are currently working on a Bus to live in as we move between contracts.
Our debt to income ration is damn low for a couple in their 40's. If I were to buy I would save up and pay outright.
It's houses, dummy (Score:2)
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It means, that they're still living at Mommy and Daddy's house, waiting for the world to give them the high paying dream job they "deserve" and would enjoy doing.....and it ain't happening.
Previous generations understood this, but apparently the snowflakes do not.
I'll stop you right there...
The previous generation don't understand how much of their success is built upon luck and the generation before them, they tend to be biased in attributing all of their good fortune to their own hard work - because that's human nature, when you're down it's bad luck (Gen-Y), when things are going your way it's all you (Gen-X). In truth it's a combination, but you can't have the hard work without first having a substantial amount of luck, even if that just means being born at the
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It means, that they're still living at Mommy and Daddy's house, waiting for the world to give them the high paying dream job they "deserve" and would enjoy doing.....and it ain't happening.
Previous generations understood this, but apparently the snowflakes do not.
I'll stop you right there...
The previous generation don't understand how much of their success is built upon luck and the generation before them, they tend to be biased in attributing all of their good fortune to their own hard work - because that's human nature, when you're down it's bad luck (Gen-Y), when things are going your way it's all you (Gen-X).
Stopping you right here...
In truth it's a combination, but you can't have the hard work without first having a substantial amount of luck,
Sure you can. It's called your grades in school. It's called not allowing your kids to be put on drugs to keep them in their seats because the teacher can't take them out for recess to run off the excess energy (yeah, not Gen-Y's fault on that one). It's call doing your best regardless of the circumstances around you, and having a strong work ethic.
Sadly, BabyBoomer/Gen-Xer's didn't generally do their Gen-Y/Millennial kids any favors with the "everyone gets a trophy" and "my kid
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It means, that they're still living at Mommy and Daddy's house, waiting for the world to give them the high paying dream job they "deserve" and would enjoy doing.....and it ain't happening.
Previous generations understood this, but apparently the snowflakes do not.
I'll stop you right there...
The previous generation don't understand how much of their success is built upon luck and the generation before them, they tend to be biased in attributing all of their good fortune to their own hard work - because that's human nature, when you're down it's bad luck (Gen-Y), when things are going your way it's all you (Gen-X).
Stopping you right here...
In truth it's a combination, but you can't have the hard work without first having a substantial amount of luck,
Sure you can. It's called your grades in school. It's called not allowing your kids to be put on drugs to keep them in their seats because the teacher can't take them out for recess to run off the excess energy (yeah, not Gen-Y's fault on that one). It's call doing your best regardless of the circumstances around you, and having a strong work ethic. Sadly, BabyBoomer/Gen-Xer's didn't generally do their Gen-Y/Millennial kids any favors with the "everyone gets a trophy" and "my kid can do no wrong" and "1+1 = 3, yeah - you tried; here's a lollipop" up-bringing. But that doesn't leave it any less on Millennials/Gen-Y to do their best and put their head down and do the job(s) they've been given/hired to do. How you treat one employer will be picked up on your interviews in the future. So yes - it is ultimately in your hands, even if your parents didn't help you much.
You want the scary part? Pretty much every single bit of research in the social sciences on the upbringing basically says that you couldn't intentionally raise kids to be little narcissistic bullies better, with serious issues with society if they manage to not end up that way because it turns out that humans are not only pretty good at detecting false & empty praise, we're in general hardwired to be not very fond of it.
This research is about as old as me, and I'm in the older segment of the Millennial
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Re: It's houses, dummy (Score:5, Insightful)
In 1977, the median income for a 30-year-old man was about $10,000, or $41,500 adjusted for inflation [1]. Today, the median income for a 30-year-old man is about $35,000 [1]. The median home sale price in 1977 was about $49,000, or $203,000 inflation-adjusted [2]. The median home sale price today is about $325,000 [2]. In 1977, a 4-year college degree at an in-state, public institution cost less than $4,000, or about $16,000 inflation-adjusted for tuition and fees [3]. Today, that's $38,600.
These are only a few rough indicators, but the point is this: a millennial or gen-xer today makes 84% in real terms of what his counterpart did in 1977; his education costs more than twice as much and has gone from something he could pay for completely with a summer job to more than a full year's salary; the house he's looking at has gone from 4 years' salary to nearly 10 years', and a 20% down payment has gone from about 3 months' salary to about two years'.
These, for example, are reasons that millennials have it tougher than previous generations.
[1] https://cps.ipums.org/cps/ [ipums.org]
[2] https://www.census.gov/const/u... [census.gov]
[3] https://nces.ed.gov/programs/d... [ed.gov]
[4] http://www.collegedata.com/cs/... [collegedata.com]
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In 1977, the median income for a 30-year-old man was about $10,000, or $41,500 adjusted for inflation. Today, the median income for a 30-year-old man is about $35,000
What is the median years of experience for both years? In 1977, a larger percentage of the workforce did not attend college so they would have have had more years to build up experience and pay raises. Going to college will increase your overall lifetime compensation but that is weighted more heavily in the later years, your overall compensation in your 20's will often be lower than someone who went to work directly out of high school. The median age for graduating with a bachelor's degree has also gone
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nope, on my second place and have 50% equity or more
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i'm in NYC and unless you're in a now non-existent rent controlled apartment, the rent will go up big over time.
some of the burbs around here do have school taxes that go up big but that is in the best school districts where it's worth it to invest in your kids instead of buying an overpriced car for yourself
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Psychologically, this also means that young adults (Score:4, Insightful)
Psychologically, this also means that young adults are more stuck with their personalities and faded of memory compared with their more mobile peers.
Practically, this means that the writer of this article is a psychobabbling fool.
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Thinking back to when I was 18-25 I moved six times. Moving out, moving from ghetto apartment to share a house, moving because the landlord needed the house for the next generation to go to college. Moving out of the nice apartment because the landlord was tired of being a landlord in-general and wanted to sell (even offered to sell to me but it wasn't where I wanted to live permanently), moving out of the house I rented with an ex-
Moving is expensive. (Score:2)
Bubble (Score:5, Insightful)
We're waiting for the bubble to burst again. Hopefully this time they don't bail out the banks and and the idiots who bought mcmansions. The bailouts (including "Keep Your Home California") prevented me, a responsible, financially stable adult, from owning a home. Prices are over double what they should be in my area.
People don't have roommates, they have roomfamilies.
Re:Bubble (Score:4, Interesting)
keep dreaming. there is no bubble this time cause i don't hear about short term loans being used to buy homes with no money down like 10 years ago
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It'll happen all over again when Trump and his congressional cronies gut Dodd-Frank.
Banks already got the golden egg and consumers over a barrel.
What is prime rate today? 3.75%? Yet they don't pay shit for savings interest and ass-rape you on your loans and credit line. Then they nickel and dime you with ATM and check fees.
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the last bubble took almost 10 years to happen and only started with clinton era policies when the current NY State governor was Secretary of HUD
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Why would anyone use a big bank in this day & age.
Local credit union gives 1.5% interest on a checking account if you have direct deposit & use debit 10x a month. Hell, that's about the same as a CD rate, so why lock your money away in one?
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https://firsttechfed.secure.fo... [force.com]
First Tech federal credit union.
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Re:Bubble (Score:5, Interesting)
You do realize that if the banks and the financial system had seized up, no one would be buying anything for a long, long time, yes?
Many bank shareholders lost plenty. The systemic risk was enabled by weak federal oversight and did not only involve the banks. The developers, the real estate agents, the local pols, dear sainted Americans who (flipped houses and/or bought stupidly and/or double mortgaged), etc. The list is of perps is long.
And what lesson did the pols learn? Screw all the banks equally, even the small-town banks that were not part of the problem. And now the goal is to remove as many constraints as possible, without fixing any of the underlying reasons the perps were able to walk away with the loot.
It may take a bit of time, but there will be another bubble, and the rules will be such that the fed. gov. won't be able to make the financial sector liquid again very easily. When that happens, watch out.
Re:Bubble (Score:5, Interesting)
Bubble? What bubble, my house is still worth 20% less than when I bought it 10 years ago. There is no bubble, and that's why people aren't moving. They owe too much on their house from last time the bubble burst. If selling your house means you have to pay the bank money to close out the mortgage, you're probably not going to move.
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Bubble? What bubble, my house is still worth 20% less than when I bought it 10 years ago. There is no bubble, and that's why people aren't moving. They owe too much on their house from last time the bubble burst. If selling your house means you have to pay the bank money to close out the mortgage, you're probably not going to move.
Same here. I live in the U.S. Midwest, and my house is still worth 20% less than when I bought it 10 years ago.
Unless I win the lottery, this is the last home I'll ever own. (I'm 50, BTW.)
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It's not like if you paid $200,000 for a house and you can sell only for $150,000 that you have to pay the bank $50,000. You might have to pay tax against that $50,000, and you might have to be careful about what state you move to as short-sale laws are not consistent across all states, but g
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Bubble? What bubble, my house is still worth 20% less than when I bought it 10 years ago. There is no bubble, and that's why people aren't moving. They owe too much on their house from last time the bubble burst. If selling your house means you have to pay the bank money to close out the mortgage, you're probably not going to move.
That, and the fact that the homes that are for sale or currently being built are all ridiculously overpriced. We bought our house about a year and a half ago. It's about 15 years old, 2k square feet and 3bd/2.5bath and we paid just under 200k for it. There is a ton of new construction here now and it all starts at 300-350K for townhomes and 400k+ for single family homes. And we are on the very outer edges of the metro area. If we hadn't gotten this house when we did we would still be renting, and stuck
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Hopefully this time they don't bail out the banks and and the idiots who bought mcmansions.
And how do you imagine that would work out? If everyone's bank accounts suddenly evaporate, your savings will be gone. And your employer's bank accounts will disappear. And your employer's customers' bank accounts will disappear. And then you have riots in the streets.
I suppose the houses that escape the fires will be cheaper, assuming anyone has money to buy them. You won't be able to get a loan because the banks will be gone, and you'll have no savings, so it's not clear where that money will come f
Re:Bubble (Score:5, Interesting)
Hopefully this time they don't bail out the banks and and the idiots who bought mcmansions.
And how do you imagine that would work out? If everyone's bank accounts suddenly evaporate, your savings will be gone. And your employer's bank accounts will disappear. And your employer's customers' bank accounts will disappear. And then you have riots in the streets.
I suppose the houses that escape the fires will be cheaper, assuming anyone has money to buy them. You won't be able to get a loan because the banks will be gone, and you'll have no savings, so it's not clear where that money will come from.. And it's not clear what currency anyone will be accepting.
Cyprus set the template for the bail-in. Basically, they can freeze all "cash-equivalent" assets for weeks and when unfrozen, everything above the FDIC** insurance limit takes a haircut (40% in the case of Cyprus)... This event basically put everyone on notice to have a contingency plan for this. If your employer doesn't have a contingency for this, they are stupid. If you are carrying cash-equivalent assets above the FDIC/SIPC limit, you are either too rich to care, or have stupidly invested your money.
The theory of the bail-in, is that it forces "rich" folks to take appropriate risks with their money and not burden the state with being the backstop for deposit insurance to those that should be able to manage the risk. Some people don't seem to understand that in order to work at all, it requires the *pause* (frozen-assets), otherwise these events just precipitates a bank run.
Historically, in order to avoid major FDIC insurance impact of liquidation, the FDIC has shopped the bank assets to other banks (so-called purchase and assumption agreements), but has needed to kick in a sweetener to cover the over FDIC limit deposits. Now the FDIC can simply convert over-limit FDIC deposits into bank-shares which eliminates the need for them to kick in the sweetener. Unfortunately, the rules are ambiguous an allow them to convert *any deposits* into bank-shares if it is deemed necessary if it "mitigates the potential for serious adverse effects to the financial system.”
**of course in Cyprus, the insurance limit was defined by the EU...
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The problem is that that is basically the only sensible option they have. Generation snowflake is also generation intern, a generation that moves from one intern position to the next until they're too old and the next batch of interns is available, baited with the same promise that you may get a fixed position if you test out ok, only to eventually learn that this is a false promise. All that happens is that you get replaced by the next intern.
I do not challenge that there are a lot of people without any ma
Connected to jobs also (Score:5, Informative)
Move for jobs... (Score:2)
I don't see why there should be a positive correlation between being less wealthy and moving less. In fact, poverty is often the driving force behind moving to or within the US. Think about okies during the great depression, Irish during the potato famine, etc.
The current resistance to moving is surprising since some areas of the US have significantly more economic opportunities than others, but fewer people are moving to take advantage of them. (That said, there is still a fair number of people who move.)
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Moving also means a considerable expense. Even ignoring any social or personal aspects that arise from uprooting yourself and moving away, moving always entails a considerable financial investment.
Now couple this with the general job (in)security and an insane turnover rate. Would you move across the country and spend what you might make in 3 months on it if you know that your chance to even still have the job in 3 months is really low?
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sorry, what? (Score:3, Funny)
"young adults are more stuck with their personalities and faded of memory "
what?
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This article joyfully translated from the speech of Mandarin.
Nobody *and* especially. (Score:3)
Nobody Is Moving, Especially Millennials
Dear Drake Baer and NY Mag Editors, If "nobody" is moving, then there cannot be an "especially".
Also, who cares? I'm 53 and have lived in the same house (which is paid for) since 1993 and the same city since 1980.
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Nobody Is Moving, Especially Millennials
Dear Drake Baer and NY Mag Editors, If "nobody" is moving, then there cannot be an "especially".
Also, who cares? I'm 53 and have lived in the same house (which is paid for) since 1993 and the same city since 1980.
I moved country in 1999. Does that count?
Re:Nobody *and* especially. (Score:4, Funny)
More mocking (Score:5, Insightful)
Clearly we need to mock and make fun of millennials more, previous disrespect has been inadequate to make them flourish just like the good ol' days.
In a slightly more serious note, this was predicted. A fair number of reputable economists warned us of our own lost generation after the 2008 crash. The bottom of the ladder got pulled and the replacement jobs available to low experience young folk are not as relatively good as what was available for other generations. So you have low wage earners with stacks of debt from surviving (how dare they!), and from getting a college degree like they were told was the only good path thousands of times (suckers!).
But it is easier to make fun of how they dress different, and use funny new words (like EVERY generation of young folks before them) than to fix the lack of good entry level jobs, low wages, expensive healthcare, and over priced tuition. It looks to me like society has failed a generation and they have made rational choices to live within their means to the extent possible.
Re:More mocking (Score:5, Insightful)
You make up this ridiculous scenario to justify your disdain, and it's sad because the fact of the matter is they won't be able to support Social Security when you become eligible. Not because they didn't try, but because circumstances forced them on a less successful path.
Before you come back at me, understand this. I am in my late 40's, and after your rant I don't really care what you have to say.
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But when you graduate from University and the only job you can land is a barista at Starbucks it's not like home ownership is the first thing on your mind.
GenX faced the same problem. Even at a good school, only half or so of the people with STEM degrees got a professional job on graduation, the other half, plus almost everyone with a loser degree, worked shit jobs for a while before finding their entry job (which is also a shit job, but it's professional shit).
Seems it's about the same now, with perhaps a longer wait for people who didn't get lucky on graduation, but that may just be a side-effect of the "great recession" which we're still climbing out of.
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First jobs are usually shit, is the thing. My first coding job paid $18k, FFS. Don't turn your nose up at that first shit job - it gets you into the industry, and it's much easier to find an OK job with 2 years of experience.
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But F'ck em if they're going to shout and scream and carry on about how they know better than the rest of us and are entitled to everything we had to work for.
No, they just want to get the same things you had to work for in exchange for the same amount of work. Nobody has had a worse deal than the millenials since we got out of the last great depression.
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Sorry, but a degree in Basket Weaving, Self-Righteous Ecology, or Women's Studies just aren't valuable for any career besides Barista.
How about Computer Science or Chemistry?
There are 1.55 STEM graduates for every entry-level STEM job. It's not just the funny-sounding majors that are having a problem.
Why is Default Not an Option? (Score:3, Insightful)
So this may sound crazy, but I wonder why today's twenty-somethings don't just simply default on their loans.
I'm a Gen Xer. I graduated college in 2000, just in time for the dot com bubble burst and 9/11 to mess with the economy. The only job I could find was as an overnight janitor at a hotel. I made $8 an hour.
There was no way I could afford both rent and student loans, so I simply didn't pay the loans. Sure it ruined my credit, but at $8 an hour it's not like anybody would be giving me loans anyways.
3.5 years later I got a job making $14 an hour, which allowed me to start paying the loans back again. As my career has progressed I've gotten promotions and raises and whatnot. Now I'm financially secure, the loans are all paid off and my credit score hovers around 750.
Careless lending by the banks is a big reason the economy is in the mess it's in today. Why pay them money before taking care of yourself? Maybe if banks were feeling some pain we'd actually see some social programs to help young people out.
Re:Why is Default Not an Option? (Score:5, Insightful)
Federal student loans are non-dischargeable. Also, many places run your credit to get an apartment, get a job, get a security clearance, dealers run your credit to get a car loan, etc. So while totally dropping out of the "system" is an option (i.e. becoming homeless), it is hard to have much of a life withing the "system" while not paying your bills.
If you do manage to get an apartment, find a way to commute, and get a job with blighted credit you still face having your wages garnished, or your bank accounts emptied to pay back those federal loans. No money in the bank means you then stand a good chance of not making rent, having your car repossessed, and then losing your job.
Dandy "system" we have, don't you think?
You can get income based repayment options, or get forbearance for a time, but you can't just walk away.
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I knew a friend of a friend, a girl, who had recently left school with a useless degree. She had gone in default on her student loans, and I was trying to tell her that the whole thing was avoidable, and that there still were things she could do to deal with that, repair her credit, and avoid wage garnishment. She insisted on being hopeless, deciding that she'd join the military on some hope or prayer that it would forgive her debt.
Though you're not able declare bankruptcy, there's still things you can do i
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Though you're not able declare bankruptcy, there's still things you can do if you can't pay back your student loans. Something I use to help is called Income Based Repayment. With that alone you basically have no excuse to let things get that bad, and if you pay it consistently, your debt is forgiven in 20 years - less if you work in education.
I did IBR too, but now I make enough that the only plan I can go on is the default 10 year repayment. As for your friend of a friend, someone should have told her that th military route only really works before you go to college. Pretty sure the GI Bill doesn't work retroactively or else there would be lines a mile long outside every single recruitment station. She would have been better off trying to teach in an inner city school for a few years. Pretty much the only way to quickly get student loan deb
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I wonder why today's twenty-somethings don't just simply default on their loans.
Mainly because student loans are not relieved from bankruptcy like other debt. That means they can garnish your wages, social security benefits and other government benefits. Basically, you do not have a retirement with outstanding student loan debt.
Re:Why is Default Not an Option? (Score:4, Interesting)
It just depends on if you went to school after 2005 when the rules changed. If you default on your loans the loan holder can apply very high interest rates ( I have seen as high as 30% and growing) making it effectively impossible to pay off. The payments become higher than a mortgage payment where a $10,000 original loan turns into a $100,000 non-dischargable debt. At some point, no matter how much money you throw at the loan, it will grow and it can never be gotten rid of even if you throw every penny you have at it. Many people have given up paying off their debt at huge economic uncertainty for retirement because they have no future because any wage can be garnished for life effectively.
Yes, in the good ole days student loans were not predatory but that changed in 2005 when the loaning industry was deregulated allowing for predatory practices. Just because what you went through was fine does not mean it is the same today.
Support System (Score:2)
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Not understanding the USA culture (Score:2)
I am a Mexican, grandson of immigrants from Europe. One of the things I don't understand about the USA is how easy people seem to relocate over there. It seems to be most easy to go at age 18 and study the university in a city nobody knows you. Then, you get a job at a different state. Two, three times, you move state because you got a job. Then, you settle... And having a family means it's harder to move (although by far not unheard of).
My grandparents moved quite a bit – Out of Europe due to poverty
IMHO, not lazy, coddled. (Score:2)
I blame us Gen X'ers for coddling kids too much. I'm not sure why we think kids will want to stand on their own if they are given everything they need or want as dependents..
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Less favorable lending rates? (Score:5, Informative)
With a 4% interest rate on a 30 year mortgage, 42% of your payments over the life of the loan are interest.
With a 8% interest rate, 62% of your payments are interest.
With a 17% interest rate, 81% of your payments are interest.
For just about anyone alive today, there has never been a better time to get a mortgage to buy a home.
Re:Less favorable lending rates? (Score:5, Insightful)
Mortgage interest rates are the lowest they've been in 60 years
True, but inflation was higher (inflating away the principle cost to the borrower) and also real home prices were rising faster (keeping borrowers from being underwater, thus always having a re-fi or selling option).
Re:Less favorable lending rates? (Score:5, Interesting)
It was determined during the late 1980's and early 1990's that an artificially lowered prime rate would spur the economy better than a "normal" or "fair" prime rate. Why?
1) Lowered mortgage interest. People who are in debt can afford to stay in debt. Banks love this because they basically own you if you're in debt to them.
2) Lowered savings interest. People who aren't in debt are getting screwed. Banks love this because it encourages everyone else to spend themselves into slavery to the banks.
So now everyone just pisses away their money as fast as they can because there's no reason not to. And when shit goes wrong, there's nothing left to save anyone, not even the banks.
Fucking genius.
Re:Less favorable lending rates? (Score:4, Informative)
It was determined during the late 1980's and early 1990's that an artificially lowered prime rate would spur the economy better than a "normal" or "fair" prime rate.
What? Rates were pretty high in the late 80s and early 90s, in 1990 the average prime rate was over 10%. (source) [infoplease.com] It's hard to pay off the mortgage on your $300,000 house when the first $30k goes to interest each year.
1) Lowered mortgage interest. People who are in debt can afford to stay in debt. Banks love this because they basically own you if you're in debt to them.
On the other hand, people can afford to pay off their mortgage because they aren't paying so much in interest. Banks don't own you just because you decided to take their money. Nobody forces you to take a mortgage, if you want to save up or get private loans to finance your home nobody is stopping you.
2) Lowered savings interest. People who aren't in debt are getting screwed. Banks love this because it encourages everyone else to spend themselves into slavery to the banks.
Spend themselves into slavery? Why would they spend themselves into slavery (and why would they be slaves to the bank if they aren't in debt?) just because fixed-income instruments aren't giving a good return? Wouldn't prudent people just reallocate their savings to other investments, like real estate or stocks?
Look, most of the large banks are pretty evil and do some incredibly shady shit but for the most part lending money to consumers isn't on that list. If you want to rail against the banks, at least educate yourself on the more egregious shenanigans they have pulled instead of whining about having to pay back money that YOU chose to borrow or claim to be a slave to the bank because you have no debt.
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Ask your average GenX about why the Savings and Loan crisis kneecapped normal growth, or your average Boomer why economic policy in the 70s was so destructive to domestic production, and I'm willing to bet you will get less of a response than asking an 'Ignorant Milennial' about what happened 9 years ago,, since they just lived/ are living through it. The people who turned the wheels that caused the fuck-ups don't like talking about why it broke, a
Snake people (Score:2)
https://chrome.google.com/webs... [google.com]
please stop the bullshit.
The End of Freedom (Score:4, Insightful)
In other news... (Score:2)
moving simply sucks
Harsh Rental Practices (Score:5, Informative)
And there still isn't any inventory to buy. There are too many people buying to turn around and immediately rent out those places.
So, despite out income and despite our savings, we're staying put.
Re:Harsh Rental Practices (Score:5, Informative)
And there still isn't any inventory to buy.
Did you vote for a politician who promised to lower regulatory barriers to home building? I'm sure the Libertarian Party of Orange County [lpoc.org] would welcome you, because I can assure you that Democrats and Republicans there are both against any new home building.
Irvine City Council candidate Courtney Santos [wordpress.com] said:
Increase supply of housing
Dialogue with developers and UCI to better understand barriers to building housing that they have experienced
Ensure efficiency in the permitting process
Be mindful that developers will pass on fees incurred during permit process to renters or buyers
Remove legal or zoning barriers to affordable, sustainable microhousing and tiny houses
Support zoning more high-density areas to allow modern solutions for living spaces for single professionals and students, such as micro-apartments and studios
Deregulate duplexes - for example, why can't property owners determine for themselves how much floor space to devote to a second unit? "The floor area of a second unit shall not exceed 30 percent of the floor area of the existing living area" (Zoning Ch. 3-26-3).
Encourage dialogue about innovative housing practices like co-housing and cooperatives
Orange County in general has a massive housing shortage (estimates vary; 40,000 to 100,000 more units may be needed countywide). Irvine is one of the cities with highest demand.
The Housing Supply is TOO DAMN LOW! (Score:3)
The BIGGEST problem in the US is the over-regulation of residential building in the most productive cities that keeps the housing supply artificially low.
In the study "Why Do Cities Matter? Local Growth and Aggregate Growth" [nber.org], the authors show that lowering regulatory constraints on housing in high productivity cities like New York, San Francisco and San Jose to the level of the median city would expand their work force and increase U.S. GDP by 9.5%. That is three or more years of current economic growth rates "for free".
Increasing density in these cities is simple. For example, see these reasonable designs [businessinsider.com] for enhanced density while maintaining green space and livability. You don't have to be like Toronto with 37 residential towers over 46 stories. You can achieve a density of 100,000 people per square mile using a mix of buildings up to 8 stories tall.
To see how screwed-up things have become, 40% of buildings in Manhattan would be illegal to build [nytimes.com] today, because of height, too many residential units, or too much mixed-use between residential and commercial.
More people living in the most productive cities will also increase the tax bases there, allowing for more investment in transport, education, etc. However transport needs would decline (or at least stay the same) if most new residents live inside these cities instead of the distant exurbs.
Harder Than It Sounds (Score:5, Interesting)
I've always been curious about how people are able to jump from one side of the country to the other and support themselves with no problems. Maybe it's because the people who do it are usually young with no real possessions to weigh them down? At my age (40), the risks start outweighing the benefits in many cases.
Re:Harder Than It Sounds (Score:4, Interesting)
Can you go ahead and couch surf, get established, and then move the family out after 6 months? Yeah it sucks.
In fact, could you live with your inlaws for 6 months (maybe just you), while you get established in a new job, then when you feel your employment is steady (you know the politics/etc) move your family out and get your own place together?
Re:Harder Than It Sounds (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, to be honest, I'm approaching that age where changing jobs becomes a bit riskier. My current job is cushy and fairly safe (plus there's a pension I'm invested in), so I'm a bit scared to throw that all away for something that could crumble after a few months. Then again, we do stupid things all the time for love.
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(plus there's a pension I'm invested in),
A someone who will never see a pension and expects not to get any social security when I am eligible to retire in 35 years(assuming it doesn't go up to 70 by then) and must therefore rely solely on savings and a 401k, do not give up that pension. I would kill for a pension. Literally. Just point me at the target and they're gone.
Ok, a little hyperbole there. But seriously, I'm even jealous even of my coworkers who are all 30 years older than me that had their pensions frozen at a couple hundred dollar
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I think you exaggerate the cost of moving. I suppose if you're assuming you're going to hire movers to do it all for you, that is indeed expensive. That's also why most employers aren't offering it.
It's much more affordable if you go for one of the options where you pack and they ship in a semi trailer (ABF U-pack is just one example; Pods may be another if they're still around) I think you could move the whole family's house full of stuff for a grand. As a single guy I moved my stuff cross-country
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I am facing a different problem: "I'm not willing to move there".
We're not exactly in the middle of nowhere, but also we're an about 1.5 hours drive away from the next large city. Don't get it wrong, this ain't backwater nowhere, you have great internet connection and VERY affordable housing around here, and we're paying VERY well. Yet people are not willing to move those 1.5 hours away from where they're living.
Hell, I know people that commute 1.5 hours each way every single day!
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Are there other jobs available for them if they do move and you decide you don't need them? Comparable jobs?
Moving is a large investment. And usually a long-term one, given the cost and the hassle factor. If the conditions aren't good for long-term in your area, don't complain if you can't get folks to move there.
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My wife and I are both
It's not moves, it's jobs [Re:trying] (Score:3)
Gen-X and boomers moved a lot when young because they got job offers and moved to take the job.
If the only jobs around are fast food and retail, there's no reason to move-- there are McDongles and Arpies all over.
Re:It's not moves, it's jobs [Re:trying] (Score:5, Funny)
Also...if you're living in your parent's basement, it is often difficult to convince them to move to where your next job offer comes from....
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It's otherwise more expensive to live now than it used to be because people purchase so many more subscription services. Cable TV. Cable Internet. Cell Phone Plan. Netflix. Amazon Prime. People also purchase a lot of expensive toys or appliances too.
Growing up in the eighties, we had one subscription service beyond basic utilities, and that was the telephone. No cable TV, no Internet access. We had many fewer electric-using appliances, so the electric
Re:Meh... Kids these days... (Score:4, Insightful)
I have had a 270 sqft apartment for most of my life.
I came across a YouTube video of a 82sft apartment in Tokyo.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYVJbupG3Xg [youtube.com]
I never really got why apartments have to be larger than they really have to be.
After my father passed away and 99.9% of what he owned got tossed out, I started tossing out the clutter in my life. That was five years ago. I could probably move into a smaller studio apartment (200-sft or less).