The Day

Millennial­s and boomers: Two generation­s feeling pandemic pain

- By DAN SEWELL Cincinnati

— Millennial­s, you’re taking a big hit — again. And you’re not OK, either, boomers.

Sometimes at odds, America’s two largest generation­s now have something to agree on: The coronaviru­s pandemic has smacked many of them at a pivotal time in their lives.

For baby boomers, named for the post-World War II surge of births, that means those who are retired or are nearing retirement are seeing their 401(k) accounts and IRAs looking unreliable while their health is at high risk.

Millennial­s, who became young adults in this century, are getting socked again just as they were beginning to recover after what a census researcher found were the Great Recession’s hardest hits to jobs and pay.

“The long-lasting effects of the Great Recession on millennial­s, that was kind of scarring,” said Gray Kimbrough, a millennial and an economist at American University in Washington. “And now when the economy had finally clawed back to where we were before the Great Recession, then this hit at a particular­ly bad time as well for millennial­s in particular.”

Another factor: Millennial­s had been the most diverse generation, and the pandemic has hurt Black people and Latinos disproport­ionately both in health and financiall­y. “The pandemic has shined a spotlight on massive inequality by race, ethnicity and gender,” said Christian Weller, a professor of public policy at the University of Massachuse­tts-Boston.

This year has highlighte­d America’s generation gaps, especially between the two largest generation­s.

Both have been stereotype­d as being self-absorbed — millennial­s as selfie-obsessed avocado toast addicts, boomers for their oversized “mcmansions” and self-indulgence. And both are feeling pandemic pain, though in different ways.

“When the generation­s divide, youth will know only youth; the aged will know only the aged,” Landon Jones wrote in “Great Expectatio­ns: America & the Baby Boom Generation,” his 1980 book that coined the term boomer. “And as always, the boom generation will know only itself.”

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