Boston Herald

Millennial­s’ worth less than boomers’ at the same age

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Millennial­s are on shaky ground, struggling to gain the same financial security afforded to their parents, new data analysis suggests.

When baby boomers were young adults, their net worth was double that of today’s young people, who earn $10,000 less than their counterpar­ts did in 1989, according to findings from advocacy group Young Invincible­s. Its analysis of Federal Reserve data comparing 25- to 34-yearolds in 2013 and 1989 after adjusting for inflation confirms what many already suspected: The American dream has slipped out of reach for the country’s largest generation.

The report points to declining wages and student debt as key factors. For boomers in 1989, the average tuition at four-year public colleges was $3,454 in today’s dollars, the study found. Today, that figure has risen to $9,410.30.

Millennial­s who entered the workforce in the wake of the Great Recession still feel the sting. Early career income often lays the foundation for lifetime earnings; the study found that 1 million young adults who experience­d long-term unemployme­nt during the recession will collective­ly miss out on income equaling $22,000 per person in the next decade.

The analysis echoes the takeaways of a collective study by Harvard, Stanford and the University of California at Berkeley last month, which found that only half of millennial­s earn more than their parents. The new research delves into the racial wage gap among millennial­s. Though the generation is the nation’s most diverse, racial and ethnic income disparity is striking.

The study found that young white Americans outpace African-Americans and Latinos in earnings by $20,000 and $17,000, respective­ly.

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