
Children are okay… .but adults are not going so well.
A new national study by Gallup and the Walton family Foundation paints a disturbing view of life’s pleasure among General Mr.
According to their 2025 study of Gen Z, most young adults – aged 18 to 28 – are not “flowering” in life as anyone might think.
Only 39% of General Z adults reported being flourishing, marking a decrease of five percent by 2024 and contributing to the overall decline in well -being throughout the generation.
The decline in well-being is being fully driven by General Z adults, as Gen Zers newer-56% to be accurate-continue to be in their happy bubble, reporting relatively higher life satisfaction.
The most dramatic decline is among the adult women of General Mr.
“We have seen some key indicators of this and other federal research that have been issued, showing that women are really struggling with anxiety and depression at a very high degree,” Stephanie Marnen, a senior partner in Gallup, told Newsweek.
“I think it’s attracting their general views of their lives, and that is what we see by manifesting in this special research effort.”
Adding this, Bryan Driscoll, a HR adviser, told Newsweek that he does not “think that General Z is fighting because they are fragile or useless or whatever. They are fighting because the system is broken.”
“Wages have not continued with costs. Housing is out of reach, and the American dream is a fraud. Women in particular hold its burden, making uneven payments, workplace sex and a political environment that treats their rights like shopping chips,” Driscoll added.
None of this really comes as a surprise, given the average of Gen Zer has about $ 94,101 in personal debt – exceeding the millennia, who have accumulated about $ 59,181 in debt.
Credit card debt is the culprit – with 56% of this generation that has a form of it.
#General #adults #blooming
Image Source : nypost.com