Edmonton Journal

Gen Z will outnumber millennial­s within a year: UN analysis WEI LU AND LEE MILLER

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Millennial­s are about to be surpassed by Generation Z.

Gen Z will comprise 32 per cent of the global population of 7.7 billion in 2019, nudging ahead of millennial­s, who will account for a 31.5 per cent share, based on Bloomberg analysis of United Nations data, and using 2000-01 as the generation­al split.

People born in 2001 will turn 18 next year, meaning many will enter university, be eligible to vote and, depending on their citizenshi­p, smoke or drink alcohol without breaking the law. Gen Zers have never known a non-digital world and have grown up amid events such as the “war on terror” and Global Recession.

“The key factor that differenti­ated these two groups, other than their age, was an element of selfawaren­ess versus self-centeredne­ss,” according to “Rise of Gen Z: New Challenge for Retailers,” a report by Marcie Merriman, an executive director at Ernst & Young LLP. Millennial­s were “more focused on what was in it for them. They also looked to others, such as the companies they did business with, for solutions, whereas the younger people naturally sought to create their own solutions.”

The demographi­c handover is good news for delivery services, gadget makers and the so-called gig economy. Meanwhile, it presents new challenges to educators, event planners, luxury brands and even golfers — a game where the average age of U.S. participan­ts now exceeds 50.

“Each generation comes with a unique set of behaviours and presents a unique set of challenges for those looking to reach them,” according to a report by research firm Nielsen Holdings PLC. “Gen Z are bombarded with messages and are a generation that can quickly detect whether or not something is relevant to them.”

For this Bloomberg comparison, millennial­s were defined as people born in 1980 through 2000, with Gen Z classified as anyone born starting in 2001 — at least until the next meaningful cohort emerges. The U.S. Census Bureau also bookends the generation­s at the end of 2000.

William Strauss and Neil Howe, American historians and authors who first coined the term “millennial­s,” use 1982 and 2004 as the cut-off years. The Pew Research Center defines those born in 1981 through 1996 as millennial­s, a timeframe also used by Ernst & Young in the survey Merriman wrote about. Even using Bloomberg ’s 2000-01 demarcatio­n, demographi­cs differ depending on location.

Millennial­s will continue to represent the bigger proportion in the world’s four largest economies: U.S., China, Japan and Germany. The combined population just shy of 2 billion in those four countries will have a ratio of 100 millennial­s for every 73 in Gen Z next year.

India, which has about 1.3 billion people versus China’s 1.4 billion, will see its Gen Z population rise to 472 million next year, 51 per cent more than China’s projected 312 million.

According to an annual survey of young people by Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Ltd., “Gen Z respondent­s anticipate being slightly happier than their millennial counterpar­ts,” with those in emerging markets in both groups more optimistic about economics and social progress than counterpar­ts in developed nations.

“In China and India, 70 per cent of the younger group expects to be happier than their parents,” according to the report, which surveyed about 10,000 millennial­s and 2,000 Gen Zers. “However, across Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States (39 per cent), the outlook is much less optimistic.”

In sub-Saharan Africa, where Gen Z already outnumbers millennial­s in all but two of about 50 nations thanks to reductions in early-childhood mortality or higher birthrates, growth comes with challenges. The World Bank estimates that one in seven youth in the region actively seeking work can’t find a job. In South Africa, the unemployme­nt rate for those aged 15-24 is about 57 per cent.

UN population division data reports population by five-year age groups. Head counts for less than five full-year groups (i.e., Gen Z population ages 15-18) were extrapolat­ed based on general distributi­on pattern. The 2019 Gen Z population was calculated by estimating crude births in 2019, adjusted for infant mortality (death per 1,000 live births for those under age 1), adding 2018 total Gen Z, adjusted for those affected by under five/child mortality not yet counted, millennial population in 2019 adjusted by the general adult mortality rate.

In China and India, 70 per cent of the younger group expects to be happier than their parents.

 ?? CHRISTIE HEMM KLOK/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The demographi­c handover — from millennial­s to Gen Z — is good news for delivery services, gadget makers and the so-called gig economy.
CHRISTIE HEMM KLOK/THE NEW YORK TIMES The demographi­c handover — from millennial­s to Gen Z — is good news for delivery services, gadget makers and the so-called gig economy.

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