I think part of this is that young adults have a harder time doing what our parents did at the same age.
When I was trying to rent my first post-college place with my girlfriend, my parents didn't think we would need a co-signer. They had gotten all their apartments, years ago, with a handshake and an understanding they had word. After they realized things had changed, they were happy to help, but it took a while.
I think there are many people, who are divorced from the experience of being a young adult, who think "kids today" aren't achieving like their parents did. They're right - we aren't living in the post-war prosperity - but I think young people are also achieving differently. Even if the things our parents did were the same price, how many of us would do them?
When I was trying to rent my first post-college place with my girlfriend, my parents didn't think we would need a co-signer. They had gotten all their apartments, years ago, with a handshake and an understanding they had word. After they realized things had changed, they were happy to help, but it took a while.
I think there are many people, who are divorced from the experience of being a young adult, who think "kids today" aren't achieving like their parents did. They're right - we aren't living in the post-war prosperity - but I think young people are also achieving differently. Even if the things our parents did were the same price, how many of us would do them?