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A new study outlines the different financial habits of each generation

Millennials and Gen Z want more financial advice from employers. Boomers? Not so much

[Source Images: Getty, Anna Nekrashevich/Pexels]

BY Shalene Gupta1 minute read

Our behavior is shaped by the times we live in and the life stage we’re in, and this includes our attitudes about personal finances.

A new study by business research firm Logica Research delved into the financial profiles of baby boomers, Gen X, millennials and Gen Z. The study, which surveys over 1,000 Americans, has been ongoing since 2017, with the most recent wave of data collected in April 2022. It found key behavioral differences in the financial patterns of each generation.

  • Boomers have the fewest expectations for financial help from their employers. Over half of Gen X, millennials, and Gen Z want their employers’ help for services such as knowing when to refinance their mortgage, and knowing how to make the most of their equity compensation, as well as understanding a health savings account. By comparison, fewer than a third of boomers want help with both of these.
  • Millennials are most likely to switch jobs. On average, 52% of Americans say they are likely to switch jobs next year. However, 67% of millennials agree with this compared to 16% of boomers, 44% of Gen Xers, and 61% of Gen Zers.
  • Millennials and Gen Z have become more active investors since the pandemic: While less than 10% of boomers are investing more than they were during the pandemic, 30% of millennials are investing more than they were before the pandemic, followed by 20% of Gen Z, and 16% of Gen X.

Lilah Raynor, CEO of Logica Research, commented: “Money will continue to be increasingly digital . . . Younger generations will go with brands that they know from their network do this exceptionally well and communicate in authentic, transparent ways. They will also look to their employers to provide tools and advice to help them manage their money.”

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Shalene Gupta is a frequent contributor to Fast Company, covering Gen Z in the workplace, the psychology of money, and health business news. She is the coauthor of The Power of Trust: How Companies Build It, Lose It, Regain It (Public Affairs, 2021) with Harvard Business School professor Sandra Sucher, and is currently working on a book about severe PMS, PMDD, and PME for Flatiron More


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