Unemployment, student debt, unaffordable housing costs — these are just some of the problems facing the generation about to take the reins of our economy. Millennials are considered to be anyone born between 1982 and 2002, and they are currently more than 80 million strong. A large majority of them are now in their 20s and 30s and anxious to establish careers and start families. Yet, a recent report from Georgetown University outlines what most working-age millennials already know: they are losing ground to previous generations. Writer Ryan Donegan has even labeled them “generation frustration.”
via Experienced Entrepreneurs and Business Leaders: Millennials Need Our Help | Jack Nadel.
