What crisis? Gen Y shrugged off financial meltdown, finds Viewpoint Report

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Generation Y kept spending throughout the global financial crisis, unfazed by the thought of unemployment / The Herald Sun

  • Generation Y ignored financial meltdown
  • Report finds their spending rose in 2009
  • Housing expert gives age group reality check

THE global financial crisis barely registered with Generation Y.

According research published today, the response of 18-24 year-old Australians to the imminent collapse of capitalism was to ignore it.

The finding emerges from the Commonwealth Bank's first Viewpoint Report, based on the experiences of 1.3 million customers.

Viewpoint found that Gen Y's spending increased 6.2 per cent in 2009, despite earnings growing only 2.5 per cent and job losses in the age group rising 13.6 per cent.

Nonetheless, their outlook was the most optimistic of any demographic, with Gen X - aged 25 to 34 - increasing spending by only 2 per cent, even though their earnings grew 4.9 per cent and job losses rose by a relatively modest 7.3 per cent.


They were also less fearful of unemployment and had less debts due to fewer assets.Michael Blythe, the Commonwealth Bank's chief economist, said that Australians in the 18-24 age group lacked experience of a full-blown recession.

"The GFC just didn't affect their spending decisions as much as you would have expected," Mr Blythe said.

In contrast, 25-34-year-olds cut costs to save for a home.

Warning

Housing experts said Generation Y needed a reality check on where they can afford to live.

Dr Owen Donald, National Housing Supply Council chairman, warned that the gap between housing stock and population had worsened and was likely to force prices even higher.

He said young adults would not be able to afford the home of their dreams within the most desirable suburbs.

"A couple bringing in $75,000 a year will not be able to afford a $600,000 pad in Sydney's trendy inner-west," Dr Donald said. "People need to be realistic . . . their aspirations have to change."

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