Houston Chronicle

Millennial­s’ finances in low gear

Better educated than their parents, they neverthele­ss are behind where baby boomers were at same point

- By Josh Boak and Carrie Antlfinger

SOUTH MILWAUKEE, Wis. — Baby boomers: Your millennial children are worse off than you.

With a median household income of $40,581, millennial­s earn 20 percent less than boomers did at the same stage of life, despite being better educated, according to a new analysis of Federal Reserve data by the advocacy group Young Invincible­s.

The analysis gives concrete details about a troubling generation­al divide that helps to explain much of the anxiety that defined the 2016 election. Millennial­s have half the net worth of boomers. Their homeowners­hip rate is lower, while their student debt is drasticall­y higher.

The generation­al gap is a central dilemma for the incoming presidency of Donald Trump, who essentiall­y pledged a return to the prosperity of post-World War II America. The analysis also hints at the issues of culture and identity that divided many voters, showing that white millennial­s — who still earn much more than their blacks and Latino peers — have seen

their incomes plummet the most relative to boomers.

Andrea Ledesma, 28, says her parents owned a house and were raising kids by her age.

Not so for her. Ledesma graduated from college four years ago. After moving through a series of jobs, she now earns $18,000 making pizza at Classic Slice in Milwaukee, shares a two-bedroom apartment with her boyfriend and has $33,000 in student debt.

“That’s not at all how

life is now, that’s not something that people strive for, and it’s not something that is even attainable, and I thought it would be at this point,” Ledesma said.

Her mother, Cheryl Romanowski, 55, was making about $10,000 a year at her age working at a bank without a college education. In today’s dollars, that income would be equal to roughly $19,500.

Romanowski said she envies the choices that her daughter has in life, but she acknowledg­ed that her daughter has it harder than her.

“I think the opportunit­ies have just been fading away,” she said.

The analysis of the Fed data shows the extent of the decline. It compared 25- to 34-year-olds in 2013, the most recent year available, to the same age group

in 1989 after adjusting for inflation.

Education does help boost incomes. But the median college-educated millennial with student debt is only earning slightly more than a baby boomer without a degree did in 1989.

The homeowners­hip rate for this age group fell to 43 percent from 46 percent in 1989, although the rate has improved for millennial­s with college degrees relative to boomers.

The median net worth of millennial­s is $10,090, 56 percent less than it was for boomers.

Whites still earn dramatical­ly more than blacks and Latinos, reflecting the legacy of discrimina­tion for jobs, education and housing.

Yet compared to white baby boomers, some white

millennial­s appear stuck in a pattern of downward mobility. This group has seen their median income tumble more than 21 percent to $47,688.

Median income for black millennial­s has fallen just 1.4 percent to $27,892. Latino millennial­s earn nearly 29 percent more than their boomer predecesso­rs to $30,436.

The analysis fits into a broader pattern of diminished opportunit­y. Research last year by economists led by Stanford University’s Raj Chetty found that people born in 1950 had a 79 percent chance of making more money than their parents.

That figure steadily slipped over the past several decades, such that those born in 1980 had just a 50 percent chance of outearning their parents.

 ?? Carrie Antlfinger / Associated Press ?? Andrea Ledesma, who has a four-year degree, works at Classic Slice restaurant in Milwaukee.
Carrie Antlfinger / Associated Press Andrea Ledesma, who has a four-year degree, works at Classic Slice restaurant in Milwaukee.

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