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'They can't buy into that American Dream': How younger workers are redefining success

For many young Americans, achieving the financial stability of their parents’ generation feels impossible.

The price of starter homes has skyrocketed. So has the cost of college loans and child care. Meanwhile, older generations are living and working longer, limiting younger workers’ chances to advance their careers and boost their salaries.

Two-thirds of Americans believe younger people face hardships today that earlier generations didn’t, and 65% of Gen Zers and 74% of millennials say they believe they are starting further behind financially than earlier generations at their age, according to an online survey of more than 2,000 U.S. adults done exclusively for USA TODAY by The Harris Poll on Aug. 25-27.

All the while, younger Americans are coming up against unprecedented challenges such as climate change and unseen levels of political divisiveness.

“They're telling us they can't buy into that American dream the way that their parents and grandparents thought about it ‒ because it's not attainable,” said The Harris Poll CEO John Gerzema, who believes there’s “an entire generation that feels like they're coming of age in sort of this fractured, divisive world” where traditional systems no longer work for them.

People walk and shop in a lower Manhattan shopping mall on September 13, 2023 in New York City.
People walk and shop in a lower Manhattan shopping mall on September 13, 2023 in New York City.

The anxiety around money is intense right now. Nearly 70% of Americans say the economy is getting worse, according to an exclusive poll from the Suffolk University Sawyer Business School and USA TODAY Sept. 6-11. They described the economy with words like “chaotic,” “disastrous,” and “dismal.”

To adapt to these new challenges, young Americans are redefining what it means to be financially successful. For many, their hopes and dreams no longer mean owning a single-family home with a white picket fence.

USA TODAY spoke to nine young Americans – Gen Zers and millennials ages 23 to 39 – about their finances and the future.

Here’s what they said.

Born and raised in New York City, Matt Marino is a teacher just like his parents.
Born and raised in New York City, Matt Marino is a teacher just like his parents.

Matt Marino

Rising cost of living. High inflation. Even higher mortgage rates. No more pensions.

These are a few of the ways New York City-based Matt Marino, a 27-year-old teacher, believes his generation faces “exponentially greater” financial hardships than previous ones.

“I think maybe for (older generations), they focused more on … having a job where you can have good money, support yourself, support your family, and even have more leftover or plan ahead for the future for retirement,” he said. He thinks its “a little different now for, for me and my generation.”

Marino said his generation views homeownership as “impossible.” His age group would rather have “more freedom,” such as having a job they really enjoy or a remote job, over one that just pays the bills, he said.