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cover of episode How Young People Are Coping With Economic Anxiety

How Young People Are Coping With Economic Anxiety

2025/5/13
logo of podcast WSJ Your Money Briefing

WSJ Your Money Briefing

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Isaac Taylor
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Julia Carpenter
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Julia Carpenter: 经济焦虑正在以各种方式重塑年轻人的财务生活,大到推迟购房和生育计划,小到削减日常开支。面对不确定的经济前景,年轻人不得不重新评估他们的财务状况和未来规划。这种焦虑感不仅仅停留在理论层面,而是实实在在地影响着他们的每一个决策,让他们在追求梦想和应对现实之间做出艰难的抉择。 Isaac Taylor: 作为一名亲历者,我深切感受到经济焦虑带来的压力。物价上涨、工作不稳定以及对未来经济衰退的担忧,迫使我和我的朋友们不得不重新审视我们的消费习惯和生活方式。我曾经计划和朋友们一起去东京庆祝30岁生日,但现在看来,这笔开销变得难以承受。我的朋友们也在努力应对财务困境,有人推迟了购房计划,有人不得不减少外出就餐的次数。这种经济焦虑已经渗透到我们生活的方方面面,让我们感到迷茫和不安。我建议大家首先要正视自己的情绪,然后制定合理的预算,量入为出,才能更好地应对经济挑战。

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Isn't home where we all want to be? Reba here for Realtor.com, the pros number one most trusted app. Finding a home is like dating. You're searching for the one. With over 500,000 new listings every month, you can find the one today.

Download the Realtor.com app because you're nearly home. Make it real with Realtor.com. Pro's number one most trusted app based on August 2024 proprietary survey. Over 500,000 new listings every month based on average new for sale and rental listings. February 2024 through January 2025. Here's your money briefing for Tuesday, May 13th. I'm Julia Carpenter for The Wall Street Journal. Economic anxiety can reshape our financial lives in ways big and small.

Some young Americans have already weathered the 2008 crash and the pandemic-era shutdowns. Now, worried about yet another recession, they're delaying milestones and cutting back on expenses. This feels like it's directly hitting us, our individual budgets, our ability to rent or make down payments, even our retirement accounts. It's in the everyday decisions and the long-term plans that we're having to reconsider.

Wall Street Journal platform editor Isaac Taylor joins me to share how he and his friends are rethinking their plans for 2025. That's after the break.

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Persistent inflation, the threat of a trade war, talk of a possible recession. There are a lot of ambient concerns stoking consumer fears right now. But how are young people supposed to make plans in the midst of it? Wall Street Journal platform editor Isaac Taylor joins me to talk about the economic anxiety keeping him and his friends awake at night. Isaac, in your column, you describe a recent experience.

a particularly herring one, I might add, at your local bagel shop. Talk to me about that bagel and what it signified for you. I went to grab brunch at this local bagel shop in Jersey City where I live. And before I even went inside, on the front door, they had this huge sign that was basically a warning for anyone coming in that any menu item containing eggs would have a pretty substantial price increase. And of

Of course, eggs on a bagel, it's not that serious, but it did exemplify the breadth of influence that economic uncertainty is having right now. This economic anxiety you describe, Isaac, what does it feel like? Over the last year or so, it's definitely intensified. Initially, there was more of a sense of, well, I'll get through this, it'll be okay. But now it feels more ingrained, like we're

in a new normal of having to be much more cautious about making tougher choices. And your financial life and that of other people in your generation has already seen its fair share of setbacks. You described coming of age during the 2008 crash and then graduating from college in the midst of a global pandemic. But you wrote, this feels like the first downturn that is having an impact on us directly. How are you seeing that play out?

The 2008 crash felt more distant. It impacted my mother in ways that I was unaware of in middle school, and the COVID-19 pandemic was really a unique moment just in and of itself, but this really feels different. This feels like it's directly hitting us, our individual budgets, our ability to rent or make down payments, even our retirement accounts.

It's in the everyday decisions and the long-term plans that we're having to reconsider. And of course, you're not the only one feeling this. You describe how your friend group is always talking about cutting back or rethinking budgets or putting plans on hold. How have your friends' financial situations changed of late? The conversations are constantly about cutting back on eating out. Friends who used to go eat out every day for lunch are now

Brown bagging it or just going to McDonald's for a cheaper option, delaying travel plans and generally just being more frugal. Some have seen their job security become less certain and a little bit more shaky, while others are grappling with the increasing cost of major life steps that they're hoping to take.

like buying a house or starting a family. It's a shared sense of pessimism around my friend group and a feeling that the financial stability we hope to have in our late 20s just isn't where we would have wanted it to be. And it's

Tough because our emotions are so tied to our sense of security and our aspirations. The first step is acknowledging those emotions, the frustration, the worry, the disappointment, and then trying to step back and look at those things from a more objective standpoint. I'm so glad you brought up the emotional piece of this because...

Emotional decisions and financial decisions can be so intertwined. Financial decisions can become emotional decisions. Emotional decisions have financial impact.

How do we separate those? Creating a budget and really understanding our actual income and expenses and making decisions based on that rather than solely how we feel in the moment is crucial. It's about finding a balance between acknowledging our emotional responses and making informed financial choices. For instance, one of my friends, he delayed proposing to his girlfriend because

because he was unfortunately laid off from his job as a recruiter last year. And he has since found another job, but he hasn't fully recovered, in part because the new job just doesn't pay as well. Delaying big milestones can be painful. And you wrote about how delaying things like house hunting or trips can feel especially painful for your generation when so much has already been delayed. What have people been putting off or reconsidering?

Well, later this year, me and a lot of my college friends were all turning 30 around the end of the year. And we had this big trip planned to Tokyo to celebrate our 30th. It was going to be this big 30th birthday bash for all of us to get together. And unfortunately, seven of us originally planned to make the trip. We're already down to three. And I think it's just becoming really difficult to justify that.

Spending any amount of money on a vacation when so many things are in flux, it seems like there's a new headline about a recession or a downturn every day. And it's unfortunate, but I do understand from their perspective, justifying spending potentially thousands on a trip to Japan is unfortunate.

just not worth it for a lot of them. I have another friend who lives in the Atlanta area and he was actively looking to buy a house but prices increased so much in the last couple years that he has had to delay that and he's still living with his aunt to save money and hopefully return to the market at some point in the near future but as tariffs potentially make the cost of buying a house even more expensive than it already was that may have to be pushed back even further.

With all of this in the air, the economic anxiety, ongoing confusion, how are you planning for the rest of 2025? The focus is going to be on cautious optimism, but also flexibility. We'll likely be prioritizing financial stability in smaller, more budget-friendly ways to celebrate and connect while keeping a close eye on how the economic situation unfolds. That's

That's WSJA Platform Editor Isaac Taylor. And that's it for your Money Briefing. This episode was produced by Zoe Kolkin with Supervising Producer Melanie Roy. I'm Julia Carpenter for The Wall Street Journal. Thanks for listening.