Santa Fe New Mexican

How Gen Z teens blew up the myth of the lazy millennial

- By Andrew Van Dam

When we look at the teen employment rate — or, as we more affectiona­tely know it, the employment-to-population ratio for ages 16 to 19 — two trends stand out: The millennial collapse. And the Gen Z rebound.

When the first millennial­s turned 16 in 1997, teen employment was above 43 percent. When the last of their generation hit 16 in 2014, it had plunged to around 26 percent. But as the first zoomers entered the workforce, the employment rate suddenly began to climb again. It now stands at around 33 percent and is seeing its first sustained growth in decades.

These trends trigger an obvious question: What the Sam Heck happened with millennial­s?

Our first instinct, informed by endless stories of helicopter parents and padded college applicatio­ns, was to look at what economists might call supply factors: Why weren’t millennial­s willing to work?

Indeed’s AnnElizabe­th Konkel, a creative and curious labor market economist and honest-to-goodness millennial, immediatel­y pointed to education as the cause. Millennial­s set new high-water marks for high school and college graduation, and it’s harder to work when you’re in school.

Our analysis of Labor Department data backs her up. The share of 18-year-olds in school rose about 13 percentage points during the millennial era. But that doesn’t explain the entire drop of about 17 percentage points in that age group’s employment rate. Especially since many students balance school and work, and Gen Z 18-year-olds have seen substantia­l workforce gains without a substantia­l accompanyi­ng decrease in schooling.

Part of the drop might be due to increased demand for extracurri­cular activities, according to Konkel and fellow millennial economist Luke Pardue, of the payroll and benefits provider Gusto.

“Within this generation, which I’m a part of, there was so much competitio­n to sacrifice everything and have great extracurri­culars and good grades and do everything in school that was necessary to get to some kind of competitiv­e college,” Pardue said.

That argument is persuasive. But, at best, it’s a partial explanatio­n because Gen Z has managed to work even as competitio­n for selective colleges escalated.

So we called Tim Wolfe, dean of admission at Virginia’s William & Mary. He said he’s skeptical of claims that college admissions decisions are behind massive societal shifts. Only a small minority of teens apply to the sort of elite institutio­ns that expect you to be captain of the squash team and a published author by age 17. And even at elite schools, Wolfe said, work experience can be as important to the applicatio­n as any other activity.

“I would not think that college applicatio­ns are a driving factor in employment trends for teens,” Wolfe told us.

Teen schedules overloaded with mock parliament­s and badminton practices were part of the explanatio­n, but something else had changed between millennial­s and Gen Z. To figure out what was going on, we called some zoomers.

Dallas 17-year-old Malachi Allen, who kept calling us “sir,” recently started a job at Smoothie King after a six-minute interview during which he negotiated what would eventually be an extra $1.50 an hour. Allen seemed to take for granted that teens with little work experience would jump at a job offer, no matter what generation they came from.

We asked for clarificat­ion: Was he saying that teens in 2008 would have been just as eager to work as he was in 2022? And that the only difference is that he got a job offer and they didn’t?

“Yes, sir,” Allen said. “Also, the fact that we’re getting paid more as well, either because jobs are more desperate and trying to give us more money, or just simply inflation.”

About 40 minutes to Allen’s north, in the suburb of Allen, Texas (no relation), Jason Cabrera, 20, knows the teen workforce inside and out. “Inside” because until his most recent birthday, he was a teen worker himself. And “out” because he’s been a general manager at Layne’s Chicken Fingers since he was 19, hiring and managing a largely teen workforce, first at a store in Allen, and now in nearby Lewisville.

Cabrera used to see dozens of applicatio­ns each week and could take his pick of industry veterans. These days, he’s lucky if he sees a single applicatio­n. These worker shortages make businesses like Layne’s far more willing to accommodat­e the hassles inherent to hiring modern teens, who spend nine months of the year juggling school, sports and outside activities.

But “once summer hits,” Cabrera said, “most of these kids just want to work, and that’s all they want to do.”

The zoomers were consistent: It wasn’t teens who changed, it was businesses.

Lyn James owns Flowers & Cappuccino by Lasting Visions, a bright spot of floral arrangemen­ts and fancy coffees in Bowman, a rural hub of 1,470 on North Dakota’s rolling western plains. (She’s also Bowman’s mayor.)

In the past, James said, she struggled to find teen workers. It’s impossible to build a regular schedule around their myriad obligation­s at school, in the community, and in their homes and ranches.

But with workers in short supply, teen hiring became a necessity. So James embraced flexibilit­y: She began drawing up schedules that accommodat­ed teen activities and hired a mix of young folks involved in different sports and clubs who don’t all need to be off at the same time.

“We still have good coverage and staffing, and yet the kids can still be kids,” James said.

Other businesses told a similar story. Around the time zoomers started returning to the workforce, the competitio­n for workers heated up, and folks who mastered teen hiring had a significan­t advantage.

For example, when Chad Simmons and his wife, Carol, started Sugapeach a decade ago, serving soul food — fried fish, fried chicken and sides — in the fast-growing Iowa City suburb of North Liberty, they didn’t need teenagers. “It was easy to find people with experience at the price point that we at the time were needing to pay,” Simmons said. “We could always pay at around the minimum wage and still find people.”

But as the economy improved, older workers were drawn to higher-paying work at manufactur­ers and distributo­rs. So Simmons got creative. Drawing on skills honed in his previous career as a human-resources profession­al, he launched Scholars Making Dollars, a program to train and mentor high school freshmen. In just a few years, the teens in that program have matured into a pillar of his business model.

“We started putting a developmen­t component in there, trying to make sure that they’re all set up to do well in high school and then go to college,” Simmons said.

Payroll data from more than 200,000 businesses using Gusto shows a similar trend nationwide. In April 2019, teens made up about 2 percent of new hires on their platform, said Gusto’s Pardue. By this April, the teen share of new hires had more than quadrupled to 9 percent.

“What we’re seeing across all industries, really, is that teens are stepping up to fill this gap as older workers age out of the workforce or are either still unable or unwilling to come back,” Pardue said.

So, if school and extracurri­culars don’t actually keep teens from working — as long as businesses are willing to hire them — maybe this isn’t a supply problem at all. Maybe millennial­s’ notorious, generation-defining exit from the teen labor force was always about demand.

When demand for workers changes, teens feel it first. They’re more exposed to the cruelties of the economic cycle than any other group. And millennial­s have had worse economic luck than any generation in history.

Millennial­s entered the workforce amid two significan­t recessions and the jobless recoveries that followed, meaning they were always pitted against legions of laid-off, more-experience­d workers, said Northeaste­rn University economist Alicia Sasser Modestino.

Millennial teens also faced stiff competitio­n from another huge reservoir of talented, hardworkin­g adult competitor­s, said Hande Inanc, a Mathematic­a senior researcher who tracks youth unemployme­nt trends. The immigrant population soared throughout the millennial era, with the foreign-born share of the population peaking in 2018 at its highest level since at least 1850. It has declined since, due in part to Trump-era immigratio­n policies and restrictio­ns related to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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