The More Things Change...

The More Things Change...
Generation X is all grown up—and its members are behaving just like their parents.

By Ayo Mseka

They may have been known as the MTV Generation or sometimes "the slackers" when they first started entering the workforce more than 25 years ago, but members of Generation X (consumers born between 1965 and 1976) are now as affluent, stable and saddled with responsibility as their parents were at the same age.

A new study from the MetLife Mature Market Institute, The MetLife Study of Generation X: The MTV Generation Moves into Mid-Life, reports that 70 percent of Gen Xers live with a spouse or partner. They have an average of 2.5 children, and 82 percent own their own homes, though 17 percent of those report that the value of those homes is less than the debt attached to them. 
      
Forty-three percent have remained in the same type of career throughout their working years and just more than 40 percent have been with the same employer for 10 years or more. 75 percent are working full or part-time and most are part of a dual-earner household.

Now approaching or in middle age, Gen Xers are part of the sandwich generation because many are caring for both their children and their parents—10 percent are grandparents. The economy has not been too tough on the group, now aged 36 to 47. Just 19 percent earn less than $35,000 per year and fully 29 percent earn more than $100,000. They are arguably better educated than any generation before them—43 percent graduated from college. Only 50 percent say they are behind on their retirement savings and they have relatively high ownership rates of 401(K) plans (66 percent).

"The Gen Xers have suffered from the 'Marcia, Marcia, Marcia' syndrome since they've been compared with The Brady Bunch daughter, Jan, the frequently unnoticed middle child," notes Sandra Timmermann, Ed.D., director of the MetLife Mature Market Institute. "Because they followed the Baby Boomers, it took a while for them to make their mark. That was also due to the fact that they're small in number--just 50 million compared to 77 million boomers--and entered the workforce later than their predecessors."

The moniker "Generation X" originated in the 1991 novel, Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture, by Douglas Coupland. At the time, the group was perceived as unfocused 20-somethings, lacking drive and taking an extraordinarily long time to grow up. They were the first to be associated with the term, "emerging adulthood" because they were thought to have put off being fully self-sufficient until their late 20s.

Other aspects of Generation X:
Survey methodology
The survey was conducted by GFK Custom Research North America on behalf of the MetLife Mature Market Institute between November 29, 2012, and December 19, 2012. A total of 1,000 interviews were completed by phone, and respondents were all born between the years of 1965 and 1976. Data were weighted by demographics to reflect the total Gen X population. 

For more information, visit www.MatureMarketInstitute.com.

National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors Service Corporation
http://www.naifa.org/