Submitted by Taps Coogan on the 1st of March 2020 to The Sounding Line.
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The following article is reposted in its entirety from LendEDU, with minor changes:
After taxes, what is the average American’s monthly income and, perhaps more importantly, how is that income spent? How does this differ from generation to generation?
LendEDU looked to answer these questions by surveying 1,000 adult Americans about what their monthly take-home pay is and how those dollars are spent on things like mortgages, insurance payments, and living necessities like groceries.
The results produced some data points that you would expect; for example, millennials are paying the most each month towards student loans, while that debt is nearly nonexistent for baby boomers.
But, there were also some surprises that go against the traditional narrative, including that millennials are the most actively involved in everyday investing, while also still equaling Generation X’s monthly retirement contribution percentage.
Let’s get into the data.
The data: how Americans are spending their monthly income, including a generational breakdown
Key findings
- Not surprisingly, millennials have the biggest financial commitment when it comes to student loan debt. From month to month, this generation is contributing 3% of their income to student loan payments compared to Generation X (1%) and baby boomers (0%).
- By a wide margin, baby boomers were dedicating the largest proportion of their monthly income to credit card payments (17%) compared to Generation X (9%) and millennials (7%).
- Considering all monthly debt payments other than those associated with housing (credit card, student loan, miscellaneous), baby boomers proportionally had the largest month-to-month commitment (22%), compared to Generation X (18%) and millennials (17%).
- However, baby boomers are able to save the largest percentage of their income from month to month (10%) compared to Generation X (6%) and millennials (8%).
- In terms of average monthly income, Generation X led the way ($6,851), followed by baby boomers ($6,355), and millennials ($5,750).
- Dispelling a common myth that millennials spend frivolously, this generation uses 5% of their monthly income for entertainment expenses, compared to baby boomers (4%) and Generation X (5%).
- On average millennials were proportionally putting the most towards active investments other than those made for retirement accounts (4%), compared to baby boomers (2%) and Generation X (2%).
- When it came to retirement contributions, both millennials and Generation X were putting 4% of their monthly income, while boomers were putting 2%.
- Considering all investment accounts (retirement and active/personal), millennials were contributing the most month to month (8%), compared to baby boomers (4%) and Generation X (6%).
- In general, all three generations were sticking close to the 28 part of the 28/36 rule which calls for committing a maximum of 28% of income to housing costs. Millennials were committing 33%, compared to baby boomers (29%) and Generation X (32%).
- Sticking with the 28/36 rule, all generations paid much more than 36% maximum proportion of their income to all debt payments. Boomers had the largest month-to-month debt commitment (51%), while both Generation X and millennials were at 50%.
- Across the board, living expenses accounted for the second largest month-to-month expense. Millennials were dedicating 24%, compared to 25% from Generation X and 22% from baby boomers.
- Baby boomers had the largest insurance commitment in terms of percentages (9%), while Generation X (8%) and millennials (6%) were not far behind.
Methodology
The results discussed in this survey were based off a survey of 1,000 adult Americans ages 18 and up. The survey was commissioned by LendEDU and conducted online by polling company Pollfish.
Properly-aged respondents were found using Pollfish’s age filtering feature. The generational breakdowns were completed according to the latest information from Pew Research Center. The silent generation respondents were grouped with baby boomers, while Generation Z respondents were grouped with millennials due to a limited sample size for the silent generation and Generation Z.
This particular survey was conducted over a five-day span, starting on September 23, 2019 and ending on September 27, 2019. All respondents were asked to answer all questions truthfully and to the best of their abilities.
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