Millennials' Biggest Financial Concern Is Student Loan Debt
A new survey from Wells Fargo provides a snapshot of how millennials – young people between 22 and 32 years of age – feel about finances. Here are five takeaways from the study. No surprise, student loan debt is the demographic’s overwhelming concern.
1. Millennials are a resilient bunch even in the face of economic adversity
Four in 10 young people between the ages of 22 and 32 feel overwhelmed by debt. Even so, nearly three-quarters think they’ll be able to save enough to live their desired lifestyle in the future, and more than two-thirds expect their standard of living to be higher than their parents’ standard of living.
What’s driving that discrepancy? Optimism about the future.
2. Student loan debt is millennials’ biggest financial concern
More millennials – 36 percent – cite student loan debt as a chief concern than any other form of debt, living expenses or retirement savings.
This isn’t surprising given rising college costs and the nation’s trillion dollar student debt problem. Around 70 percent of recent graduates have student loan debt, with the average borrower taking out nearly $30,000 to pay for school.
Pair that with a sluggish job market, and young people are putting off saving for retirement and big purchases like cars and houses, which economists say could hurt the overall economy.
Wells Fargo Millennial Survey