• Skua
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    364 days ago

    Right, so the “where” is the USA.

    If we take this definition of the generations and table 12 from here, we can compare the values 16 years apart to see generations at equivalent ages. 2023 is the most recent data on that table, so millennials would be 27 to 42. We can’t match that perfectly with the 5 year bins on the table, so I’ll just average every bin that that generation covers a majority of. With that, we get:

    2023 2007 1991
    Gen Z 23.6% x x
    Millennials 47.9% 24.8% x
    Gen X 72.0% 53.4% 15.3%
    Boomers 78.5% 76.9% 49.1%

    We can compare generations at the same age by looking along the topleft-bottomright diagonal. This shows gen Z having a lower ownership rate than Millennials did 16 years ago. Millennials were doing better than gen X 16 years before that, but have now fallen behind both gen X and the boomers.

    Sure enough, the entirety of the discussion of homeownership in the article you linked is:

    American Zoomers’ home-ownership rates are higher than millennials’ at the same age (even if they are lower than previous generations’).

    Not sure what data they’re using since that doesn’t tally with the above, but that’s still second-worst, and the actual worst is the generation the post is actually talking about.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 days ago

      no way 47% of millennials own a home. i’m 34 and don’t even have a cent in the bank. I’m happy with renting though because home ownership has alot of responsibilities i don’t really want because im super lazy.

      • Skua
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        14 days ago

        It’s worth considering that that still means a (slim) majority of millennials don’t own a home. You’re also roughly in the middle of the generation, and the hone ownership is quite heavily weighted towards the older end