
老一代人经常吐槽现在的年轻人太懒,这一点中美两国倒是没啥区别。在美国,有的企业老板公然支持员工躺床上办公。在TikTok上,“躺平”和“懒女孩的工作”都是热搜词。总而言之,当代年轻人给人的总体印象就是做事敷衍、不愿下苦功夫,让老一代简直觉得没眼看。比如曾出演过《修女也疯狂》的乌比・戈德堡就就指责现在的年轻人不像她那代人那样拼命干活了。
最近,54岁的喜剧演员里克・默瑟也跟风批评年轻人工作不卖力,这下子,一个年轻人终于忍无可忍,跳出来指责老一代人的双标。
事情的起因,是默瑟在节目中嘲笑现在的年轻人连每周工作40小时都受不了。这则节目上线后,27岁的罗比・斯科特跳了出来,指责以默瑟为代表的老一代人根本不了解“拼尽全力却一无所获”是什么样的感受。他的这番话在TikTok上引起了200多万人的共鸣。
斯科特在这条爆款短视频中说:“有些人当时靠着3万块的年薪,就能住上四室一厅的房子,开上崭新的凯迪拉克跑车。你还指望他们能理解一个研究生毕业的人,每周工作40多个小时,却买不起偏远地区的一套老破小是什么感觉?”
中年人比年轻人更好拿捏?
光阴似箭,曾经经常被拿来批判的“千禧一代”也终于媳妇熬成婆,被划入中年人的行列了。如今的“千禧一代人”基本上都是30多岁奔40了,在职场上也积累了一定的认可度。Resume Genius公司的一项调查就发现,目前在美国的职场上,“千禧一代”是最受欢迎的求职者,45%的招聘经理都打算招聘这一代的中人。
而所谓的“Z世代”(也就是95后)呢?就连已经晋升到领导岗位上的95后也承认,自己这代人是最难共事的。而且相比于前几代人,这一代年轻人的幻灭感也是最强的。
年轻人为何感到愤怒
斯科特表示,现在的美国年轻人“很愤怒,有强烈的权益意识,爱发牢骚”,这并非是因为他们不愿意工作,而是因为相比于前几代人,他们的付出没有得到回报。
“最扯淡的是,我们把能做的都做了,我们努力学习,考上了大学,我们有的十五六岁就开始工作了……你们让我们干什么,我们就干什么,结果呢?都快30岁的人了,我们还得住在父亲家里!”
他说的还是很有道理的。
在美国,“千禧一代”是历史上受教育程度最高的一代,“Z世代”紧随其后。然而与前几代人相比,现在美国年轻人的就业机会和经济前景却黯淡得多。
而且美国当前的就业市场也是尤为残酷的。近期的一份报告显示,美国有约20%的求职者已经找了10到12个月的工作甚至更久,但仍然一无所获。
更糟糕的是,在背了几万美元的学费贷后,如今的企业高管却告诉他们,大学学位没什么价值,在90%的情况下,他们即便没有大学学位也能找到工作。
无怪乎个人理财网站Bankrate的一项调查显示,有24%的背着学生贷的美国人表示,上大学是他们此生最后悔的一笔投资。
除此之外,现在的年轻人还发现,即便他们历经千辛万苦有了一份工作,他们的工资也不像父母那辈人那样经花。
目前,美国住房价格的中位数是433100美元,要负担得起这样一套房子,你的年收入得达到166000美元以上。然而根据官主数据,美国家庭收入的中位数仅为78538 美元,而入门级职位的薪水更是只有这个数字的一半左右。
另外,在2000年以来,美国的房价涨幅比收入涨幅快了两倍多,由于生活成本不断上涨,有的年轻人不得不同时打三份工。
斯科特说:“我认识一些30多岁的人,他们已经工作20年了,他们不睡觉的时间70%都在工作,但仍然买不起人生中的第一套房。”
“千禧一代和Z世代的工作时长比以往任何一代都要多,但我们的收入相比其他任何一代都要少得多,而且少得不成比例。”
“他们给我们灌的是毒鸡汤”
现实与理想的巨大差距,让很多毕业生产生了幻灭感。斯科特这条视频引起了许多年轻人的共鸣,大家都觉得自己是被老一代人哄骗着去追逐一个遥不可及的梦想。
“我永远都后悔上大学,他们给我们灌了一碗毒鸡汤。”一位洋抖用户评论道。
“我16岁时第一份工作的时薪是7.25美元。10 年后我有了本科学位,时薪才14美元。”另一位用户附和道。
一位X世代用户也认同,现在的年轻人的生活比以往任何时候都艰难。“我44岁了,我可以说,我们现在每周工作40小时的强度,跟我25岁的时候根本不能比。现在我们每个人都是干着以前两三个人的活。”
当然,也有网友将责任归咎于那些自愿选择上大学的年轻人。“你们净上了一些没用的学位,现在找不到好工作了,就说是所有人的错!”(财富中文网)
译者:朴成奎
“你年轻的时候一年挣3万就能买四室一厅的房子和凯迪拉克的跑车,你能理解现在年轻人一周工作40个小时都买不起一套‘老破小’的感觉吗?”洋抖网友灵魂一问引热议。RYAN MCVAY—GETTY IMAGES
老一代人经常吐槽现在的年轻人太懒,这一点中美两国倒是没啥区别。在美国,有的企业老板公然支持员工躺床上办公。在TikTok上,“躺平”和“懒女孩的工作”都是热搜词。总而言之,当代年轻人给人的总体印象就是做事敷衍、不愿下苦功夫,让老一代简直觉得没眼看。比如曾出演过《修女也疯狂》的乌比・戈德堡就就指责现在的年轻人不像她那代人那样拼命干活了。
最近,54岁的喜剧演员里克・默瑟也跟风批评年轻人工作不卖力,这下子,一个年轻人终于忍无可忍,跳出来指责老一代人的双标。
事情的起因,是默瑟在节目中嘲笑现在的年轻人连每周工作40小时都受不了。这则节目上线后,27岁的罗比・斯科特跳了出来,指责以默瑟为代表的老一代人根本不了解“拼尽全力却一无所获”是什么样的感受。他的这番话在洋抖上引起了200多万人的共鸣。
斯科特在这条爆款短视频中说:“有些人当时靠着3万块的年薪,就能住上四室一厅的房子,开上崭新的凯迪拉克跑车。你还指望他们能理解一个研究生毕业的人,每周工作40多个小时,却买不起偏远地区的一套老破小是什么感觉?”
中年人比年轻人更好拿捏?
光阴似箭,曾经经常被拿来批判的“千禧一代”也终于媳妇熬成婆,被划入中年人的行列了。如今的“千禧一代人”基本上都是30多岁奔40了,在职场上也积累了一定的认可度。Resume Genius公司的一项调查就发现,目前在美国的职场上,“千禧一代”是最受欢迎的求职者,45%的招聘经理都打算招聘这一代的中人。
而所谓的“Z世代”(也就是95后)呢?就连已经晋升到领导岗位上的95后也承认,自己这代人是最难共事的。而且相比于前几代人,这一代年轻人的幻灭感也是最强的。
年轻人为何感到愤怒
斯科特表示,现在的美国年轻人“很愤怒,有强烈的权益意识,爱发牢骚”,这并非是因为他们不愿意工作,而是因为相比于前几代人,他们的付出没有得到回报。
“最扯淡的是,我们把能做的都做了,我们努力学习,考上了大学,我们有的十五六岁就开始工作了……你们让我们干什么,我们就干什么,结果呢?都快30岁的人了,我们还得住在父亲家里!”
他说的还是很有道理的。
在美国,“千禧一代”是历史上受教育程度最高的一代,“Z世代”紧随其后。然而与前几代人相比,现在美国年轻人的就业机会和经济前景却黯淡得多。
而且美国当前的就业市场也是尤为残酷的。近期的一份报告显示,美国有约20%的求职者已经找了10到12个月的工作甚至更久,但仍然一无所获。
更糟糕的是,在背了几万美元的学费贷后,如今的企业高管却告诉他们,大学学位没什么价值,在90%的情况下,他们即便没有大学学位也能找到工作。
无怪乎个人理财网站Bankrate的一项调查显示,有24%的背着学生贷的美国人表示,上大学是他们此生最后悔的一笔投资。
除此之外,现在的年轻人还发现,即便他们历经千辛万苦有了一份工作,他们的工资也不像父母那辈人那样经花。
目前,美国住房价格的中位数是433100美元,要负担得起这样一套房子,你的年收入得达到166000美元以上。然而根据官主数据,美国家庭收入的中位数仅为78538 美元,而入门级职位的薪水更是只有这个数字的一半左右。
另外,在2000年以来,美国的房价涨幅比收入涨幅快了两倍多,由于生活成本不断上涨,有的年轻人不得不同时打三份工。
斯科特说:“我认识一些30多岁的人,他们已经工作20年了,他们不睡觉的时间70%都在工作,但仍然买不起人生中的第一套房。”
“千禧一代和Z世代的工作时长比以往任何一代都要多,但我们的收入相比其他任何一代都要少得多,而且少得不成比例。”
“他们给我们灌的是毒鸡汤”
现实与理想的巨大差距,让很多毕业生产生了幻灭感。斯科特这条视频引起了许多年轻人的共鸣,大家都觉得自己是被老一代人哄骗着去追逐一个遥不可及的梦想。
“我永远都后悔上大学,他们给我们灌了一碗毒鸡汤。”一位洋抖用户评论道。
“我16岁时第一份工作的时薪是7.25美元。10 年后我有了本科学位,时薪才14美元。”另一位用户附和道。
一位X世代用户也认同,现在的年轻人的生活比以往任何时候都艰难。“我44岁了,我可以说,我们现在每周工作40小时的强度,跟我25岁的时候根本不能比。现在我们每个人都是干着以前两三个人的活。”
当然,也有网友将责任归咎于那些自愿选择上大学的年轻人。“你们净上了一些没用的学位,现在找不到好工作了,就说是所有人的错!”(财富中文网)
译者:朴成奎
Baby boomers “who bought a four-bedroom home and a brand-new Cadillac convertible off of a $30,000-a-year salary” won’t be able to understand Gen Z’s gripe with the 40-hour workweek, a viral TikToker said.
It’s no secret that Gen Z often gets flack for being “lazy.” From the Gen Z CEO who defends working from bed to the TikTok trends of quiet quitting and “lazy girl jobs,” Gen Z has developed a reputation for applying minimal effort. And their elders are taking notice, like when Sister Act star Whoopi Goldberg chastised young people for not wanting to “bust their behinds” like her generation had to.
So when the 54-year-old comedian Rick Mercer joined in on the dogpiling and openly started criticizing younger workers, it was the last straw for one Gen Zer who pointed out the double standard of older generations.
In response to Mercer making fun of young people complaining about the 40-hour workweek, 27-year-old Robbie Scott hit back that baby boomers don’t know what it’s like working hard only to “get nothing in return”—and it’s resonated with over 2 million TikTokers.
“We need to stop expecting the same damn people who bought a four-bedroom home and a brand-new Cadillac convertible off of a $30,000-a-year salary to understand what it’s like to be working 40-plus hours a week with a master’s degree and still not being able to afford a 400-square-foot studio apartment in bumf-ck Iowa,” Scott scoffed in the viral video.
Gen Z vs. millennial work ethic
Though Gen Z and millennials are often equated as the youngsters in the office, millennials are now well into their 30s and 40s and have gained some credibility in the workplace. A poll from Resume Genius found that millennials are the most popular job candidates, with 45% of hiring managers expecting to hire members of the generation.
Even Gen Z managers who have risen the ranks cited their own generation as the most difficult to work with. But Gen Z may have more reason to be disillusioned than the generations that came before.
Gen Z is angry—here’s why
The reason Gen Z are “getting angry and entitled and whiny,” Scott says, isn’t because they’re any less willing to work than previous generations, but because they’ve got nothing to show for it.
“What’s sh-tty is, we’re holding up our end of the deal,” Scott said. “We’re staying in school. We’re going to college. We’ve been working since we were 15, 16 years old…doing everything that y’all told us to do so that we can what? Still be living in our parents’ homes in our late twenties?”
He has a point.
Millennials are the most educated generation in history, with Gen Z closely following behind. Yet their financial prospects and chances of getting hired are significantly dimmer than those of Gen X graduates.
And the job market is particularly brutal right now. About 20% of job seekers have been looking for 10 to 12 months or longer with no luck, according to a recent report.
To make matters worse, after racking up thousands in student debt, they’re now being told by executives that their degree holds little value and that in 90% of cases they could have gotten a job without one.
It’s perhaps no surprise, then, that 24% of Americans with student loan debt say it’s their biggest financial regret, according to a survey from personal finance site Bankrate.
To top that off, once young people do manage to hold down a job they are finding that their salary doesn’t quite stretch like it did for their parents.
To afford the median-priced home of $433,100, Americans need an annual income of roughly $166,600. However, the median household earns just $78,538, according to the U.S. Census, and entry-level positions pay around half of that.
To put that into context, house prices have increased more than twice as fast as income has since the turn of the millennium—and it’s forcing young workers today to hold down not one, but three or more jobs to keep up with the rising cost of living.
“I know people in their mid-thirties who have been working for 20 years,” Scott echoed. “That’s like 70% of their waking life they have been working and they still cannot afford to purchase their first home.”
“Millennials and Gen Z are working more than any other generation ever has,” he added. “We are also making considerably and disproportionately much less than any other generation has.”
‘They sold us a lie’
Given the clear disparity between the prospects of graduates today versus the generations before them, Scott’s viral video struck a chord with young people who felt like they were encouraged to chase an unattainable dream.
“I will forever regret going to college,” one user commented. “They sold us a lie.”
“My first job at 16 paid $7.25 an hour. 10 years later I have a bachelor’s degree and am making $14 an hour,” another echoed.
Even a Gen X viewer agreed that workers today have it tougher than ever before: “I’m 44 and [I’ll] tell you—we are NOT working the same 40 hrs as we did when I was 25. We’re doing the work of 2–3 people now.”
Meanwhile, another person put the blame on young people for going to college, saying, “yall go get these stupid degrees that don’t get good paying jobs then cry about its everyone’s fault.”