Gen Z's dangerous attitude to debt (2024)

If you want to find out what Generation Z is thinking, look at what’s trending on TikTok. One meme seen millions of times during lockdown has been the #GoHard video, featuring a comedic lip-syncing sketch to the US rapper Kreayshawn’s lyrics: “I’d really like to do that but I don’t have any f***ing money”. The meme reflects the frustrations of wanting to do something and then discovering a genius way to do it without needing to pay.Several of them feature ‘buy now, pay later’ payment app Klarna as the ‘solution’.

Any company would bend over backwards for such authentic, fun — and free — advertising; it reflects the Swedish finance firm Klarna’s growing Gen Z-centred customer base. Klarna has been operating in the UK since 2017 and has now linked up with more than 4,500 major retailers from H&M to J.D. Sports. This and other similar apps such as PayPal Credit, Clearpay, and Laybuy enable online customers to either delay or divide the payment across multiple weeks — without incurring interest.

These apps have been godsends for online shoppers during the pandemic because of the way they enable the consumer to purchase several items, try them and send unwanted ones back before they have officially paid for them. Shoppers are not caught up in the inconvenience of delayed reimbursem*nt from retailers. It enables consumers to literally ‘try before they buy’ even when the shops are all shut.

More from this authorThe truth about Gen ZBy Eliza Filby

One TikTok meme sees parcel after parcel pile up on a bed with the tag: “Klarna getting me through lockdown one ASOS package at a time.” This trend is real. The price comparison sitecomparethemarket.comfound that 23% of Gen Z have turned to ‘buy now, pay later’ services during lockdown. While many of us are feeling rather smug about all the savings we are making during this enforced period of restrictive spending, some are experiencing the opposite: online spending sprees funded through delayed payment apps mean that they risk emerging out of lockdown with significant amounts of debt.

“Keep thinking I’m saving money in lockdown and then I remember my FAT klarna bill” tweets one customer. For a large proportion of this generation, whose status emanates from an ever-evolving visual identity through social media, lockdown has been a case of ‘you can’t change your location but you can change your clothes’. With Klarna the default payment option at the checkout on some sites, it’s easy to see why it is so alluring.

As a convenient, flexible alternative to store and credit cards,it appears to be a wholly benign form of debt. Problems can arise, however, if you miss a payment (which with bi-weekly instead of the usual monthly payments is all too easy). Klarna itself has estimated that consumers spend on average 55% more when they are given the option of delaying or paying over several weeks (without admitting that this may be money customers do not have). Email and text reminders are sent, but the account will be sent to a debt collection agency when customers fail to act. Klarna has said that it has clear T&Cs, a strict vetting process and responsive customer service but an investigation byThe Daily Telegraphfound that 30,000 customers have already had their credit damaged because of missed payments.

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As debt services go, it would be wrong to put them in the same class as Wonga or BrightHouse (which, incidentally, folded during lockdown) but we are right to question their corporate responsibility when this service is so quick, easy and marketed chiefly at the young.With its millennial pink logo and its focus on social media influencers such as Love Island contestants, Klarna has successfully tapped into a tricky market that can often allude major retailers. Its recent campaign “Shop like a Queen” was a deliberate appeal to the LGBTQI community, sponsoring the former Ru Paul’s US Drag Race stars Katya Zamolodchikova and Trixie Mattel’s YouTube show UNHhhh.

But a generation that has had a smartphone in their palm since their early teens is wary of crudeendorsem*nts. One US viewer complained on Reddit that he was ‘disappointed’ to see UNHhhh“turn into an extended commercial for [a] credit scheme”. This generation, which grew up in the wake of the 2008 financial crash, also takes a sceptical view of investments, the stock market and established money lenders. According to the consultancy firm Cassandra, only 34% of Gen Z trust banks.

Gen Z are wired differently to millennials when it comes to consumption, debt and saving. Whereas millennials grew up in the boom years, Gen Z’s childhood (when your attitudes towards money are formulated) was defined by the crash, followed by austerity and sluggish recovery in the wake of the Brexit referendum. They watched their parents struggle and will now themselves experience the Corona Crash. They won’t able to rely on the bank of Mum and Dad in the same way that a significant number of millennials did.

They also grew up during the fintech revolution, during which automated payments and cashless transactions became the new normal, and the weight of coins in your pocket was an alien sensation. Add to that the era of fast-fashion, fast-consumption and you have a generation that is on the one hand much more prudent than millennialsin valuing money, but also much more vulnerable when it comes to spending it.

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The combination of tech and tough times has made them more resourceful and more entrepreneurial — a number generate their own money from a younger age. They are also savvy shoppers to whom price comparison is second nature, while their ethical credentials and fashion-conscious aesthetic has triggered a revolution in the second-hand clothes market which rivals that of fast-fashion.Depop, a buying and selling app, has experienced a 90% increase in traffic since 1 April.

There are signs that they are more inclined to save than millennials too. When HSBC ran a survey asking Gen Z and millennials what they would do with £1,000 cash, 72% of Gen Z (compared with 55% of millennials) said they would put it into a savings account. The challenger bank Monzo, an app-only bank whose card is now a staple in every Gen Z wallet, catered for the new banking priorities of young people post-Crash who wanted greater control over their finances through its spending notifications and saving pot features. It also recently signed a deal with the saving app Emma, which it plans to launch for those as young as 11.

Generation Z may see the benefits of saving, but they also have a more relaxed attitude towards spending and debt. Student loans have normalised debt for the young but not given them the skills to manage it. Debt, of any kind, has been made to feel inconsequential. As one commented on TikTok responding to a #GoHard Klarna video: “I have a debt collection agency after me for a £15 ASOS order” — complete with a laughing emoji. The social shame of living on the never-never, common up until the 1980s, is not something that bothers this generation.

Nor perhaps does the prospect of insolvency. Bankruptcy claims among the young have increased tenfold in three years: under-25s now account for 6.5% of all cases, according to the accountancy firm RSM. One debt advice company estimated that this demographic represented 14% of all clients in 2018, with an average debt of £6,000. A studyfound that 18% of 18-24-year-olds use their credit card for bills and essentials.

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The success of these apps also lies in the fact that Generation Z, more than any other generation, has been conditioned to the ‘one-click’ transaction. Apps such as Klarna do not just encourage the “I want it now” urge but also normalise the frictionless buying experience. This was pioneered by Amazon and Apple but in the case of Klarna, is financed through debt.

The move to a cashless society has meant that all ages have experienced a growing detachment and responsibility from the transaction — the psychological difference between a couple of clicks online and physically handing over cash. This becomes problematic when it is a debt-based transaction by someone young, financially vulnerable, used to one-click credit and with an easy attitude towards debt. Parents have been talking to their kids about the perilous nature of social interactions online; it could be that they also need to start educating them on the perilous nature of financial transactions online too.

But beware lecturing the young on money. The days of delayed gratification are long gone for most of us. Generation Z are no more consumerist than their parents, and certainly more financially inventive, informed and resourceful than millennials. Some responsibility must lie with companies themselves in providing full transparency of terms, thorough checks on vulnerable customers and a genuine commitment to responsible debt control. The debt industry will always work out new methods to lure consumers and for the majority, debt is convenient and, if managed, perfectly sound financial behaviour. But we are facing a fierce financial headwind that has already disproportionately impacted the young.

One bruised Klarna customer on Reddit offered a solution: “Saving seems to be an act of resistance.” To Gen Z, a savvy, activist generation, recalibrating shrewd financial behaviour into a political act might just gain traction.

Eliza Filby is a speaker, writer & consultant specialising in the history of generations and the evolution of contemporary values.

Gen Z's dangerous attitude to debt (1)@ElizaFilby

Gen Z's dangerous attitude to debt (2024)

FAQs

Why is Gen Z in so much debt? ›

Gen Z is being hit hardest by inflation

Housing costs, which have risen rapidly since the pandemic, are by far the biggest burden on Gen Z. Adults under 35 are more likely to rent than to own and tend to move more often — both of which can result in more frequent price increases.

Which generation is most in debt? ›

(NewsNation) — Mortgages make up the bulk of household debt but a new analysis shows most Americans owe thousands of dollars beyond their home loans, with members of Gen X carrying the highest balances.

What does Gen Z struggle with the most? ›

Gen Z Struggles With Mental Health

According to McKinsey, over half (55%) of Gen Zers report having either been diagnosed or receiving treatment for a mental health condition, compared to 31% of people aged 55 to 64, who have had decades longer to seek and get treatment.

What are the financial challenges of Gen Z? ›

A majority of Gen Z borrowers, 74 percent, say they've stalled important financial decisions due to their student loan debt, according to a December 2023 Bankrate survey. Inflation also chips away the purchasing power of savings over time. Market volatility and potential job market fluctuations are also concerns.

What is the average credit card debt held by Gen Z? ›

The average credit card debt held by Gen Z is $2,854, according to Q3 2022 data from the credit bureau Experian.

Is Gen Z leaning hard on credit cards? ›

Additionally, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York found that nearly 1 out of every 7 (15.3%) of Gen Z Americans have maxed out their credit cards, compared to only 12.1% of millennials and 9.6% of Gen Xers.

Which is the unhappiest generation? ›

Jessica Burbank and Amber Duke react to new findings in the world happiness report that a great percentage of the Gen Z population is unhappy.

Which generation is the wealthiest in the US? ›

Baby Boomers Own Over Half of the Wealth

Baby Boomers are often considered one of the luckier generations in terms of timing.

What generation will inherit the most money? ›

Gen Xers are predicted to inherit the most, followed closely by millennials, and then Gen Zers, according to Merrill Lynch. Younger generations, in a particular economic bind as they navigate student loans, a volatile housing market, and years of inflation, stand to gain the most from this transfer.

What is Gen Zs attitude toward money? ›

Despite their digital savvy and cautious financial habits, there exists a notable gap in formal financial education for Gen Z. Many young people report feeling ill-prepared to make informed financial decisions, from managing debt to investing wisely.

What stresses Gen Z the most? ›

For a majority of Gen Z youth, gun violence—mass shootings and school shootings—are significant sources of stress.

Why is life so hard for Gen Z? ›

She says Gen Z faces more challenges in some ways than previous generations. “There's a growth in inequality in the transition to adulthood. There's a lot of changes in culture and norms, insecurity more generally, in terms of climate change and the war and school shootings and rapid inflation.

Are Gen Z financially savvy? ›

For example, a new study by the Investment Company Institute (ICI) finds that “Gen Z households have nearly three times more assets in the [retirement] plan accounts (adjusted for inflation) that Gen X households did at the same age.” More Gen Z-ers have retirement plans set up and they've saved more in those accounts.

How many Gen Z live paycheck to paycheck? ›

Only the oldest Generation Z members have joined the workforce, and nearly two-thirds (65.5%) of them live paycheck to paycheck. A total of 64.44% of Gen Zers struggle with high monthly bills. Low income poses a problem for 57.78% of them, and unexpected emergencies derail nearly half (48.89%) of Gen Z budgets.

Which generation is the most financially stable? ›

Baby boomers have the most wealth among four recorded generations. Other generations have less wealth, but it's not necessarily an indication of financial problems. Plan for upcoming economic issues such as higher housing and medical costs by investing early.

Which generation has the most student debt? ›

Student loan debt

Young people are more likely to have student loan balances: 24.3% of millennials and 20.2% of Gen Z are in student debt, compared to 14.9% of Gen X, 6.1% of boomers and only 1.4% of the silent generation. But among those who have student loan debt, Gen X owes the most, on average.

What is the average credit score of a Gen Z? ›

A breakdown of younger generation credit scores

Millennials and Gen Zers, however, average lower credit scores. Millennials average a credit score of 690, and Gen Zers come in at 680. For reference, the qualifying credit score for most conventional home loans is 620, according to Rocket Mortgage.

Who does Gen Z trust the most? ›

TikTok, Snapchat and Spotify top a list of brands Gen Z consumers trust most compared to all U.S. adults, according to a new report from decision intelligence company Morning Consult.

Is Gen Z getting hit hard by inflation? ›

What generation is most affected by inflation? Based on that generation-specific measure, yearly inflation in March was running about half a percentage point higher for Gen Z than for every other cohort − millennials, Gen X, baby boomers and the "silent" and "greatest" generations − a significant difference.

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