Scott Galloway, professor of marketing at NYU Stern School of Business, says that “we are literally stealing from future generations,” and unless we “level up and make the same forward-looking investments we've made in the past,” our nation “may not survive.”
In his book The Algebra of Wealth, Galloway explains why young people are struggling in today’s economy, saying that “almost everything we do economically in the United States is a transfer of wealth from young to old.” The result: a younger generation whose “purchasing power has gone down.” They “can't afford a home, can't afford education, and they’re not forming families,” says Galloway.
He also highlights the emotional and social challenges faced by young men, who are “four times as likely to kill themselves as women, three times as likely to be addicted, 12 times as likely to be incarcerated. In the next five years, we're going to have three female college graduates to every two male.”
Galloway shares some of his own experiences with money and life and says that a certain amount of money is “imperative” in a capitalist society, in which economic security allows you “to be freed from the anxiety that sometimes gets in the way of the key to happiness, and that is cementing relationships.”
“Every study shows that people overestimate the amount of happiness they're going to get from things, and they underestimate the happiness they're going to get from experiences,” he says.
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