“I still find myself living paycheck to paycheck,” Mains says, and hasn’t been able to build any savings.
Mains, who majored in apparel merchandising and media studies, has applied to hundreds of public relations and marketing jobs but has had just a few interviews in a cooling labor market. New grads are competing not just among themselves but with laid-off white-collar workers in fields such as tech and consulting, according to a LinkedIn report.
Although she eats out with college friends three or four times a week, she has been gravitating to restaurants and bars that offer discount specials.
At the end of the summer, she plans to move back in with her parents in Atlanta and hunt for a PR or marketing job in New York City or Los Angeles. She isn’t sure how she’ll afford the astronomical rents.
The additional costs that Gen Zers face have led them to amass more credit card debt than millennials at the same age, according to a TransUnion study last month. Gen Zers ages 22 to 24 had an average credit card balance of $2,834 late last year, compared with an inflation-adjusted $2,248 for millennials at the same age in late 2013.
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