The New Zealand Herald

‘Selfie generation’ aren’t so selfish

- Jamie Morton

Baby Boomers take note: the stereotype about selfie-snapping, smashed avocado-bingeing millennial­s has just been, well, smashed.

A new study finds nothing to suggest millennial­s feel any more entitled than previous generation­s did at the same age.

The research, led by Sam Stronge from the University of Auckland’s School of Psychology, drew on data from the National Attitudes and Values Survey, a huge longitudin­al programme tracking the views of more than 10,000 Kiwis.

Earlier work by Stronge found that, while New Zealanders generally had healthy levels of self-esteem, just one in 10 of us had traits that could be considered narcissist­ic.

In the new study, the doctoral researcher tested “psychologi­cal entitlemen­t”, or the sense that one was entitled to more than other people, as a measure of narcissism.

Her findings showed no evidence that New Zealanders were more narcissist­ic than they used to be — or that younger generation­s feel any more entitled that previous generation­s did at the same age.

But she emphasised that the data was only a “first look” and should be treated with caution.

“The NZAVS has only been going six years so far, so we could only track changes over five years of data and we know that psychosoci­al changes happen slowly and over longer periods of time. What we have done in this study is come up with some initial findings and what we’re looking forward to is building on these to track changes in narcissism over time.”

While the study found no big rise in a sense of entitlemen­t by younger people — including the socalled millennial generation, or those born between 1982 and 2002 — it did find a slight increase in entitlemen­t for people aged 65 years and over, particular­ly women.

Women aged 64 years showed higher levels of entitlemen­t than women aged 64 did five years ago, as did men aged 64 and 69 years old.

“There could be a simple explanatio­n for this, which aligns with internatio­nal research, and that is what we call the ‘la dolce vita’ effect, retired people feeling they have worked hard and now deserve to reap the benefits of that.”

The study also looked at gender difference­s in regard to a sense of entitlemen­t.

“Looking at gender difference­s for example, men were on average more entitled than women,” Stronge said.

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