Herald on Sunday

What stops Gen-Me sleeping

A new survey shows millennial­s do care about such issues as the environmen­t. The state of the environmen­t topped the list, followed by concerns about mental health and wellbeing.

- By Brittany Keogh

Generation Me? Maybe not — a new survey suggests millennial­s care about a lot more than themselves. A survey by youth charity Inspiring Stories asked people aged 13 to their 30s to rank the importance of issues that keep them awake at night.

And contrary to cliche, it wasn’t all about smashed avocado and social media.

The state of the environmen­t topped the list, followed by concerns about mental health and wellbeing.

Inspiring Stories’ chief executive and founder Guy Ryan, who was named Young New Zealander of the Year in 2015, said the results echoed what he was hearing from young people — they care about the future of New Zealand.

“I think a whole lot of young New Zealanders do care that we’re not taking strong leadership on climate change and these are huge issues that our young people will face,” said Ryan, who at 31 is himself part of the generation.

The survey, which had a small sample size, was carried out ahead of the Festival for the Future conference to be held next month.

A group of millennial­s approached by the Herald on Sunday in Auckland CBD said their main concern was the student loans hanging over their heads.

Zachariah Al-Alami, 22, said his student debt made it hard to think about renting, never mind buying a house, and putting food on the table.

Coco Al-Alami, 24, and Foulagi Johnson, 30, also raised the issue of housing. The pair own a house on Auckland’s North Shore, which they have filled with flatmates to help pay the mortgage.

“I’m working fulltime and I’m studying and I don’t think [owning a home] would be attainable if we didn’t have it subsidised by flatmates,” said Johnson.

Of the 150 respondent­s from around New Zealand, 81 per cent said they considered the future of the environmen­t to be very important, ranking the topic at between eight and 10, and just under three-quarters (74 per cent) said it was very important to talk about mental health and well-being.

The release of the survey comes after the Herald launched a major series — Breaking the Silence — looking at New Zealand’s youth suicide rate. Ryan said the survey results clearly illustrate­d some leaders weren’t doing enough to combat issues considered important by young people.

Many young people wanted to engage with issues that affect New Zealand, but felt disempower­ed and disengaged from the political system.

“If you look at the stats, the youth voter turnout has been in decline for the last several elections,” Ryan said.

He told the Herald on Sunday he believed one of the biggest challenges facing young Kiwis was that the world was changing so quickly and many people in power, particular­ly in government, grew up in a different time.

“We’ve got so many young people coming out of tertiary education right now with unpreceden­ted student debt. The cost of housing is higher than it has ever been.

“The nature of work is changing. This [is] coupled with some really big environmen­tal challenges that we face.

“We’ve got a pretty narrow window. If we don’t get this stuff right then it’s going to have some pretty devastatin­g consequenc­es for many, many, many years to come and for our future.”

Ryan said more investment into robust research about what young Kiwis think of the state of the nation and what their vision was for the future was important.

And he said the perception that millennial­s were selfish and entitled was mostly inaccurate.

“I don’t agree with the ‘Generation Me’ thing. I think it’s really hard to generalise across an entire generation. Even if you look at the millennial demographi­c, it’s people born between 1980 and 2000, a 20-year span — which is pretty significan­t.”

The survey results have been used to shape the programme of this year’s Festival for the Future, run by youth for youth and to be held at Auckland’s Aotea Centre from August 4-6.

Editorial: More than me, p26

 ?? Mike Scott ?? Despite the stereotype, young people feel concern for things other than themselves — like the environmen­t.
Mike Scott Despite the stereotype, young people feel concern for things other than themselves — like the environmen­t.
 ??  ?? Zac Al-Alami.
Zac Al-Alami.
 ??  ?? Guy Ryan.
Guy Ryan.

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