| irstupid said: Let millennials do whatever they want. I read an article the other day saying that 1 in 6 millennials have 100,000 in savings right now. *I call complete bullshit on that, fyi. But it's not just Avacado's or expensive coffee. Where I work, I'm pretty sure I'm the only one that eats in every single day. Most people go out to eat for lunch. They are spending like $8-10 easy every day buying lunch. If you make your lunch you will save a lot. Then take going to bars on weekends, or going out to eat at night a lot or ordering pizza delivery, smoking, marijuana, beer, microtransactions, ect. It's a culmination of a lot of things, not just avacado's or expensive cofees that can save people thousands. |
Eh, it depends on when the cut-off point for millennials is. The "millennial" generation is typically considered to start somewhere in the span of 1977-1983, and ends some time between 1993-1996. If you take the earliest years for both, you have millennials in their 40s now, while the youngest are 25. I could see 1 in 6 in that age range having 100,000 in savings.








