Generation Z
Generation Z, often shortened to Gen Z and informally known as zoomers, is the demographic cohort succeeding Millennials and preceding Generation Alpha. Researchers and popular media use the mid-to-late 1990s as starting birth years and the early 2010s as ending birth years, with the generation loosely being defined as people born from 1997 to 2012.[1] Most members of Generation Z are the children of Generation X,[2] and it is expected that many will be the parents of the proposed Generation Beta.[3] As children in the mid-late 2000s and 2010s, Generation Z was the first social generation to grow up with Web 2.0 and digital technology as an established commodity.[4] From a young age, they have watched online videos and web series (often via YouTube),[5] and played online games like Club Penguin[6] and Minecraft.[7] As adolescents and young adults in the 2010s and 2020s, members of the generation were dubbed "digital natives",[8] even if they were not necessarily digitally literate[9] and might struggle in a digital workplace.[10][11] Generation Z has been described as "better behaved and less hedonistic" than previous generations.[12][13] They have fewer teenage pregnancies, consume less alcohol (but not necessarily other psychoactive drugs),[14][15][16] and are more focused on school and job prospects.[12][17] They are also better at delaying gratification than teens from the 1960s.[18] Sexting became popular during Gen Z's adolescent years, although the long-term psychological effects are not yet fully understood.[19] There is greater awareness and diagnosis of mental health conditions among Generation Z,[17][16][20][21] and sleep deprivation is more frequently reported.[22][23][24] Moreover, the negative effects of screen time in the late 2010s were most pronounced in adolescents, as compared to younger children.[25] Youth subcultures have not disappeared, but they have been quieter.[26][27] Nostalgia is a major theme of youth culture in the 2010s and 2020s.[28][29][30] TerminologyThe name Generation Z is a reference to it being the second generation after Generation X, continuing the alphabetical sequence from Generation Y (Millennials).[31][32] Other names for the generation have included iGeneration,[33] Homeland Generation,[34] Net Gen,[33] Digital Natives,[33] Neo-Digital Natives (emphasizing the shift from PC-to-mobile and text-to-video among this cohort),[35] Pluralist Generation,[33] Internet Generation,[36] and Centennials.[37] The Pew Research Center surveyed the various terms for this cohort on Google Trends in 2019 and found that in the U.S., Generation Z was overwhelmingly the most popular.[38] The Merriam-Webster and Oxford dictionaries both have official entries for Generation Z.[39]
Michael Dimmock, Pew Research Center[39]
Rapper MC Lars used the term iGeneration as a song title[40] in 2003, initially referring to Millennials.[41] Psychology professor and author Jean Twenge also used the term, intending it as the title of her 2006 book about Millennials but changing the title to Generation Me at the insistence of her publisher. Twenge later used the term for her 2017 book on Gen Z, iGen. Others also claim to have coined the name.[33] Authors William Strauss and Neil Howe, creators of the Strauss–Howe generational theory, adopted the term Homeland Generation (or Homelanders)[34] in 2005 after sponsoring a contest to name the post-Millennial group.[33] The term Homeland refers to being the first generation to enter childhood after protective surveillance state measures, like the Department of Homeland Security, were put into effect following the September 11 attacks.[34] Zoomer is an informal term used to refer to members of Generation Z.[42][43][44] It combines the shorthand boomer, referring to baby boomers, with the "Z" from Generation Z. Zoomer in its current incarnation skyrocketed in popularity in 2018, when it was used in an internet meme on 4chan mocking Gen Z adolescents via a Wojak caricature dubbed a "Zoomer".[45][46] Merriam-Webster's records suggest the use of the term zoomer in the sense of Generation Z dates to at least as early as 2016. It was added to the Merriam-Webster dictionary in October 2021[42] and to Dictionary.com in January 2020.[47] Prior to this, zoomer was occasionally used to describe particularly active baby boomers.[42] Date and age range definitionsThe Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary defines Generation Z as "the generation of people born in the late 1990s and early 2000s".[48] The Oxford Dictionaries define Generation Z as "the group of people who were born between the late 1990s and the early 2010s, who are regarded as being very familiar with the internet".[49] Encyclopedia Britannica defines Generation Z as "the term used to describe Americans born during the late 1990s and early 2000s. Some sources give the specific year range of 1997–2012, although the years spanned are sometimes contested or debated because generations and their zeitgeists are difficult to delineate."[4] The Pew Research Center has defined 1997 as the starting birth year for Generation Z, basing this on "different formative experiences", such as new technological and socioeconomic developments, as well as growing up in a world after the September 11 attacks.[50] Pew has not specified an endpoint for Generation Z, but used 2012 as a tentative endpoint for their 2019 report.[50] News outlets most frequently use a starting birth year of 1997, often citing Pew Research Center.[a] Various think tanks and analytics companies also have set a 1997 start date,[b] as do numerous management and consulting firms.[c] In a 2022 report, the U.S. Census designates Generation Z as "the youngest generation with adult members (born 1997 to 2013)".[73] Statistics Canada used 1997 to 2012, citing Pew Research Center, in a 2022 publication analyzing their 2021 census.[74] The United States Library of Congress uses 1997 to 2012, citing Pew Research as well.[75] The Collins Dictionary defines Generation Z as "members of the generation of people born between the mid-1990s and mid-2010s".[76] In her book iGen (2017), psychologist Jean Twenge defines the "iGeneration" as the cohort born between 1995 and 2012.[77] The Statistics Bureau of Japan defined Generation Z as those born 1995 to 2010 in their 2020 Census.[78] Other news outlets occasionally use 1995 as the starting birth year of Generation Z,[d] as do sometimes a few management and consulting firms.[e] The Australian Bureau of Statistics defines Generation Z as those born between 1996 and 2010 in a 2021 Census report.[83] Rarely, a few management and consulting firms have used 1996 as a starting date for Generation Z.[f] Individuals born in the Millennial and Generation Z cusp years have been sometimes identified as a "microgeneration" with characteristics of both generations. The most common name given for these cuspers is Zillennials.[86][87] Individuals born on the cusp of Generation Z and Generation Alpha have been referred to as Zalphas.[88] Arts and cultureHappiness and personal values![]() The Economist has described Generation Z as a more educated, well-behaved, stressed and depressed generation in comparison to previous generations.[17] In 2016, the Varkey Foundation and Populus conducted an international study examining the attitudes of over 20,000 people aged 15 to 21 in twenty countries and that 59% of Gen Z youth were happy overall with the states of affairs in their personal lives. The most unhappy young people were from South Korea (29%) and Japan (28%) while the happiest were from Indonesia (90%) and Nigeria (78%).[89] The best sources of happiness were being physically and mentally healthy (94%), having a good relationship with family (92%), and with friends (91%). In general, respondents who were younger and male tended to be happier. Religious faith was purportedly the least happiness-inducing.[89] The top reasons for anxiety and stress were money (51%) and school (46%); social media and having access to basic resources (such as food and water) finished the list, both at 10%. Concerns over food and water were most serious in China (19%), India (16%), and Indonesia (16%); young Indians were also more likely than average to report stress due to social media (19%).[89] Important personal values of Gen Z are their families and themselves get ahead in life (both 27%), followed by honesty (26%). Looking beyond their local communities came last at 6%.[89] Familial values were especially strong in South America (34%) while individualism and the entrepreneurial spirit proved popular in Africa (37%). People who influenced youths the most were parents (89%), friends (79%), and teachers (70%). Celebrities (30%) and politicians (17%) came last. In general, young men were more likely to be influenced by athletes and politicians than young women, who preferred books and fictional characters. Celebrity culture was especially influential in China (60%) and Nigeria (71%) and particularly irrelevant in Argentina and Turkey (both 19%).[89] For young people, the most important factors for their current or future careers were the possibility of honing their skills (24%), and income (23%) while the most unimportant factors were fame (3%) and whether or not the organization they worked for made a positive impact on the world (13%). The most important factors for young people when thinking about their futures were their families (47%) and their health (21%); the welfare of the world at large (4%) and their local communities (1%) bottomed the list.[89] Common cultureThe COVID-19 pandemic struck when the oldest members of Generation Z were just joining the workforce and the rest were still in school.[90] While Generation Z proved to be less resilient than older cohorts, their fundamental values did not change, and they remained open to change, such as the transition towards hybrid school and remote work.[91] On average, Generation Z is more likely to value ambition, creativity, and curiosity than the general population, including Millennials.[92] A 2020 survey conducted by the Center for Generational Kinetics, on 1,000 members of Generation Z and 1,000 Millennials, suggests that Generation Z still would like to travel, despite the COVID-19 pandemic and the recession it induced. However, Generation Z is more likely to look carefully for package deals that would bring them the most value for their money, as many of them are already saving money for buying a house and for retirement, and they prefer more physically active trips. Mobile-friendly websites and social-media engagements are both important.[93] They take advantage of the Internet to market and sell their fresh produce. In Western countries like the United Kingdom, teenagers now prefer to get their news from social-media networks such as Instagram and TikTok and the video-sharing site YouTube rather than more traditional media, such as radio or television.[94] Having a mobile device has become almost universal by the time the first wave of Generation Z reaches adolescence. Some even have their phones besides them in bed.[95] But despite being digital natives, Generation Z also values in-person interactions and recognizes the limits of virtual communications.[92] Among children and teenagers of the 2010s, much leisure time is spent watching television, reading, social networking, watching YouTube videos, and playing games on smartphones.[96] Subcultures and nostalgia![]() During the 2000s and especially the 2010s, youth subcultures that were as influential as what existed during the late 20th century became scarcer and quieter, at least in real life though not necessarily on the Internet, and more ridden with irony and self-consciousness due to the awareness of incessant peer surveillance.[97][98] In Germany, for instance, youth appears more interested in a more mainstream lifestyle with goals such as finishing school, owning a home in the suburbs, maintaining friendships and family relationships, and stable employment, rather than popular culture, glamor, or consumerism.[99] Boundaries between the different youth subcultures appear to have been blurred, and nostalgic sentiments have risen.[97][98] Although nostalgia is normally associated with the elderly, this sentiment is now commonplace among those who came of age during the 2010s and 2020s. Struggling with present realities, Millennials and Generation Z long for the past, when life seemed simpler and less stressful, even if they have themselves never experienced it.[100] For example, although an aesthetic dubbed 'cottagecore' in 2018 has been around for many years,[101] it has become a subculture of Generation Z,[102] especially on various social media networks in the wake of the mass lockdowns imposed to combat the spread of COVID-19.[103] It is a form of escapism[101] and aspirational nostalgia.[104] Nostalgic sentiments surged during and after the COVID pandemic.[105] Vintage fashion is growing in vogue among Millennial and Generation Z consumers.[106] Nevertheless, large shares of Generation Z have never visited museums or heritage sites, preferring instead to watch television or browsing social media.[107] Spotify consumer data from 2022 suggests that Generation Z is most nostalgic for the 1980s.[100] The Netflix science-fiction horror series Stranger Things (2016–2025) is a major example of using and evoking nostalgia for the 1980s, enabling Generation Z to learn what their Generation X parents experienced in their youth during that decade.[108] 1980s songs featured in the Stranger Things soundtracks that became popular among Generation Z included "Running Up That Hill" (1985) by Kate Bush, which has appeared in many TikTok videos.[109] There is evidence that Generation Z is also nostalgic for the 1990s and 2000s,[105] given the popularity of aesthetics such as grunge, Y2K, and Frutiger Aero among this cohort.[110][111][112][113][114] Other trends of fashion and lifestyles among Generation Z include VSCO girl, E-girl and E-boy, and Barbiecore, among many others, made popular by TikTok, Instagram, Pinterest, influencers and celebrities.[115][116] In Japan, Generation Z has Shōwa nostalgia[117][118] and the Shōwa-era music of Akina Nakamori, Seiko Matsuda and Yōko Oginome is popular with them.[119][120] 1970s and 1980s city pop music, such as that of Mariya Takeuchi, is also popular with Generation Z, both in and outside of Japan.[121][122] Television and streamingViewership for children's cable networks such as Disney Channel, Nickelodeon, and Cartoon Network was strong in the mid-late 2000s, when older Gen Z members were children.[123][124][125] However, ratings began to fall in the early 2010s; Nickelodeon experienced a sharp double-digit decline by the end of 2011, described as "inexplicable" by Viacom management.[126] This decline continued among Generation Alpha viewers in the 2020s, with the rise of streaming services.[127][128] Generation Z continues to enjoy comfort television shows from the 1990s and 2000s, such as The Office (2005–2013) and Friends (1994–2004).[129][130] In the United Kingdom, Friends was chosen by over 2,000 children and teenagers as their favourite programme, according to a 2019 report by Childwise; most of these young people watched the series on Netflix rather than on television.[129] Meanwhile, the animated series Bluey (2018–present), though made for preschool children, has been surprisingly well-received among teenagers and young adults because it portrays family life positively and makes them feel nostalgic.[131][132] It also helps many Millennials and members of Generation Z heal emotional wounds from their childhoods.[133][134] Global demand for Japanese animations (anime) is projected to continue growing until at least 2030 due to interest among young people.[135] Reading habits![]() According to a 2019 OECD survey, members of Generation Z were spending more time on electronic devices and less time reading books than before,[136][137][138] with implications for their attention spans,[139] vocabulary,[140][141] academic performance,[142] and future economic contributions.[136] In New Zealand, child development psychologist Tom Nicholson noted a marked decline in vocabulary usage and reading among schoolchildren, many of whom are reluctant to use the dictionary. According to a 2008 survey[needs update] by the National Education Monitoring Project, about one in five year-four and year-eight pupils read books as a hobby, a ten-percent drop from 2000.[140] In the United Kingdom, children and teenagers of the 2010s reportedly spent more time playing video games and watching YouTube videos but less time reading.[96] By 2022, Generation Z accounted for the majority of book purchases in that country.[143] However, teenage girls are much more likely than boys to read for pleasure. About one in three children struggle with finding something interesting to read.[137] According to the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS), fourth graders in 2016, in 13 out of 20 countries and territories surveyed, were markedly less enthusiastic about reading than their predecessors in 2001 while their parents were even less keen on reading than they were.[144] Among members of Generation Z who read, romantic fantasy and Japanese comics (manga), such as One Piece (1997–present) or Naruto (1999–2014), are some of the most popular. Unlike older cohorts, they are fond of fan fiction and escapism.[145] In addition, BookTok, a community on TikTok, has many members from Generation Z,[146] especially teenage girls and young women.[147] BookTok has stimulated a revival of volitional reading among the young[148] and a surge in book sales for publishers.[147][149] Fan fiction![]() During the first two decades of the 21st century, writing and reading fan fiction and creating fandoms of fictional works became a prevalent activity worldwide. Demographic data from various depositories revealed that those who read and wrote fan fiction were overwhelmingly young, in their teens and twenties, and female.[150][151][152] For example, an analysis published in 2019 by data scientists Cecilia Aragon and Katie Davis of the site FanFiction.Net showed that some 60 billion words of contents were added during the previous 20 years by 10 million English-speaking people whose median age was 151⁄2 years.[152] Fan fiction writers base their work on various internationally popular cultural phenomena such as K-pop, Star Trek, Harry Potter, Twilight, Star Wars, Doctor Who, and My Little Pony, known as 'canon', as well as other things they considered important to their lives, like natural disasters.[150][151][152] Much of fan fiction concerns the romantic pairing of fictional characters of interest, or 'shipping'.[153] Aragon and Davis argued that writing fan fiction stories could help young people combat social isolation and hone their writing skills outside of school in an environment of like-minded people where they can receive (anonymous) constructive feedback, what they call 'distributed mentoring'.[152] Informatics specialist Rebecca Black added that fan fiction writing could also be a useful resource for English-language learners. Indeed, the analysis of Aragon and Davis showed that for every 650 reviews a fan fiction writer receives, their vocabulary improved by one year of age, though this may not generalize to older cohorts.[154] On the other hand, children browsing fan fiction contents might be exposed to cyberbullying, crude comments, and other inappropriate materials.[153] Music![]() Generation Z has a plethora of options when it comes to music consumption, allowing for a highly personalized experience.[155] Spotify and terrestrial radio are the top choices for music listening,[156] while YouTube is the preferred platform for music discovery.[129][156] In mid-2023, Spotify reported more growth than expected in the number of subscribers among Generation Z.[157] Additional research showed that within the past few decades, popular music has gotten slower; that majorities of listeners young and old preferred older songs rather than keeping up with new ones; that the language of popular songs was becoming more negative psychologically; and that lyrics were becoming simpler and more repetitive, approaching one-word sheets, something measurable by observing how efficiently lossless compression algorithms (such as the LZ algorithm) handled them.[158] On the other hand, texture and rhythm are becoming more complex.[159] Streaming services have made it extremely easy for listeners to sample songs; this is putting pressure on musicians to compose songs that are as easy to process and have as many hooks as possible.[159] Sad music is quite popular among adolescents, though it can dampen their moods, especially among girls.[155] Demographics
As of 2020[update], although many countries have aging populations and declining birth rates, Generation Z was the largest generation alive.[160] Bloomberg's analysis of United Nations data predicted that, in 2019, members of Generation Z accounted for 2.47 billion (32%) of the 7.7 billion inhabitants of Earth, surpassing the Millennial population of 2.43 billion. The generational cutoff of Generation Z and Millennials for this analysis was placed at 2000 to 2001.[161][162] AfricaIn 2018, Generation Z comprised the majority of the population of Africa.[163] In 2017, 60% of the 1.2 billion people living in Africa fell below the age of 25.[164] In 2019, 46% of the South African population, or 27.5 million people, are members of Generation Z.[165] Statistical projections from the United Nations in 2019 suggest that, in 2020, the people of Niger had a median age of 15.2, Mali 16.3, Chad 16.6, Somalia, Uganda, and Angola all 16.7, the Democratic Republic of the Congo 17.0, Burundi 17.3, Mozambique and Zambia both 17.6. This means that more than half of their populations were born in the first two decades of the 21st century. These are the world's youngest countries by median age.[166] AsiaAccording to a 2022 McKinsey & Company insight, Generation Z will account for a quarter of the population of the Asia-Pacific region by 2025, and possess a global spending power of approximately US$140bn by 2030.[167] As a result of cultural ideals, government policy, and female modern medicine, there have been severe gender population imbalances in China and India. According to the United Nations, in 2018, there were 112 Chinese males for every hundred females ages 15 to 29; in India, there were 111 males for every hundred females in that age group. China had a total of 34 million excess males and India 37 million, more than the entire population of Malaysia. Together, China and India had a combined 50 million excess males under the age of 20. Such a discrepancy fuels loneliness epidemics, human trafficking (from elsewhere in Asia, such as Cambodia and Vietnam), and prostitution, among other societal problems.[168]
EuropeOut of the approximately 66.8 million people of the UK in 2019, there were approximately 12.6 million people (18.8%) in Generation Z, if defined as those born from 1997 to 2012.[169] Generation Z is the most diverse generation in the European Union in regards to national origin.[170] In Europe generally, 13.9% of those ages 14 and younger in 2019 (which includes older Generation Alpha) were born in another EU Member State, and 6.6% were born outside the EU. In Luxembourg, 20.5% were born in another country, largely within the EU (6.6% outside the EU compared to 13.9% in another member state); in Ireland, 12.0% were born in another country; in Sweden, 9.4% were born in another country, largely outside the EU (7.8% outside the EU compared to 1.6% in another member state). In Finland, 4.5% of people aged 14 and younger were born abroad and 10.6% had a foreign-background in 2021.[171] However, Gen Z from eastern Europe is much more homogeneous: in Croatia, only 0.7% of those aged 14 and younger were foreign-born; in the Czech Republic, 1.1% aged 14 and younger were foreign-born.[170] Higher portions of those ages 15 to 29 in 2019 (which includes younger Millennials) were foreign born in Europe. Luxembourg had the highest share of young people (41.9%) born in a foreign country. More than 20% of this age group were foreign-born in Cyprus, Malta, Austria and Sweden. The highest shares of non-EU born young adults were found in Sweden, Spain and Luxemburg. Like with those under age 14, countries in eastern Europe generally have much smaller populations of foreign-born young adults. Poland, Lithuania, Slovakia, Bulgaria and Latvia had the lowest shares of foreign-born young people, at 1.4 to 2.5% of the total age group.[170]
North AmericaData from Statistics Canada published in 2017 showed that Generation Z comprised 17.6% of the Canadian population.[172] ![]() A report by demographer William Frey of the Brookings Institution stated that in the United States, the Millennials are a bridge between the largely white pre-Millennials (Generation X and their predecessors) and the more diverse post-Millennials (Generation Z and their successors).[173] Frey's analysis of U.S. Census data suggests that as of 2019, 50.9% of Generation Z is white, 13.8% is black, 25.0% Hispanic, and 5.3% Asian.[174] 29% of Generation Z are children of immigrants or immigrants themselves, compared to 23% of Millennials when they were at the same age.[175] Members of Generation Z are slightly less likely to be foreign-born than Millennials;[176] the fact that more American Latinos were born in the U.S. rather than abroad plays a role in making the first wave of Generation Z appear better educated than their predecessors. However, researchers warn that this trend could be altered by changing immigration patterns and the younger members of Generation Z choosing alternate educational paths.[177] As a demographic cohort, Generation Z is smaller than the baby boomers and their children, the Millennials.[178] According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Generation Z makes up about one quarter of the U.S. population, as of 2015.[179] There was an 'echo boom' in the 2000s; this boom certainly increased the absolute number of future young adults, but did not significantly change the relative sizes of this cohort compared to their parents.[180] According to a 2022 Gallup survey, 20.8%, or about one in five members, of Gen Z identify as LGBTQ+.[181]
Economic trendsConsumptionAs consumers, members of Generation Z are typically reliant on the Internet to research their options and to place orders. They tend to be skeptical and will shun firms whose actions and values are contradictory.[182][183] Their purchases are heavily influenced by trends promoted by "influencers" on social media,[184][185] as well as the fear of missing out (FOMO) and peer pressure.[186] The need to be "trendy" is a prime motivator.[185] Due to their relatively high income, Generation Z have higher spending habits. According to new research, they rely on social media to make purchasing decisions, with health and beauty products being the most consumed category on these platforms.[187] In the West, while majorities might signal their support for certain ideals such as "environmental consciousness" to pollsters, actual purchases do not reflect their stated views, as can be seen from their high demand for cheap but not durable clothing ("fast fashion"), or preference for rapid delivery.[182][183][184] Despite their socially progressive views, large numbers are still willing to purchase these items when human rights abuses in the developing countries that produce them are brought up.[185] However, young Western consumers of this cohort are less likely to pay a premium for what they want compared to their counterparts from emerging economies.[182][183] In China, young people have less disposable income than before due to a slowing economy. Even so, while they are saving money on basic necessities, they are willing to spend more money on hobbies or items that make them feel happy.[188] In culturally modernizing Saudi Arabia, where 63% of the population was under the age of 30 as of 2024, luxury brands have seen growth in the market aimed at young consumers, most of whom make online purchases and prefer products that not only reflects their cultural heritage but are also modern.[189] In the United Kingdom, Generation Z's general avoidance of alcohol and tobacco has noticeably reduced government revenue in the form of the 'sin tax'.[190] Indeed, many young Britons remain dependent on their parents to pay their bills in a stagnant economy and about a quarter spends virtually nothing on luxuries.[191] In much of Western Europe, Generation Z faces economic stagnation or even falling standards of living. But in the United States, the reverse is true.[192] Food choices![]() The food choices made by Generation Z reflect the generation's concerns about climate, sustainability, and animal welfare. A study by catering firm Aramark found 79% of members of the generation would go meatless between once and twice a week.[193] The generation is considered the most interested in plant-based and vegan food choices, which they see as equal to other food types. As Generation Z's purchasing power grows, so does the amount of vegan and vegetarian food they eat.[194] Generation Z sees dining out with friends and sharing small plates of food as exciting and interesting. According to 2022 Ernst & Young data, plant-based meat, cultured meat, and fermented meat are forecast to grow to 40% of the market by volume by 2040 in the United States. Plant-based meat is widely available in supermarkets and restaurants, but cultured and fermented meats (which are made without slaughtering animals) are not commercially available but are now being developed by companies.[195] Transportation choicesAcross the developed world, young people are noticeably less likely to get a driver's license or to own a car than older generations.[196][197] This new trend is driven by the possibility of making online purchases, economic constraints, concerns for the environment, viability of alternatives to driving (walking, biking, public transit, and ride sharing), and growing restrictions on driving within urban areas.[196][197] In the United States, however, decades of auto-centric urban development have led to under-investment in walkable neighborhoods, bicycle lanes, and public transit, making it likely that most members of Generation Z will eventually become frequent drivers, like the Millennials before them, even if they dislike cars.[198] EmploymentAccording to the International Labor Organization (ILA), the COVID-19 pandemic has amplified youth unemployment, but unevenly. By 2022, youth unemployment stood at 12.7% in Africa, 20.5% in Latin America, and 8.3% in North America.[199] In the early 2020s, Chinese youths find themselves struggling with job hunting. University education offers little help.[200] In fact, due to the mismatch between education and the job market, those with no university qualifications are less likely to be unemployed.[201] By June 2023, China's unemployment rate for people aged 16 to 24 was about one fifth.[202] In South Korea, people below the age of 40 are increasingly interested in relocating from the cities, especially Seoul, to the countryside and working on the farm. Working in a conglomerate like Samsung or Hyundai Group no longer appeals to young people, many of whom prefer to avoid becoming a workaholic or are pessimistic about their ability to be as successful as their fathers.[203] In Germany, some public officials are recommending shorter work weeks at the same salary levels in spite of the struggling German economy. The situation is similar in other European countries.[204] In the United Kingdom, Generation Z is facing a gig economy with precarious prospects and stagnant wages.[191] Many young Europeans with high skills are leaving their home countries for places that offer more job opportunities, higher salaries, and lower taxes; they typically choose another country in Europe with a stronger economy or the United States.[205] In Canada, people aged 15 to 24 faced an unemployment rate of 12.2%, or more than twice that of prime working-age adults, as of 2025. Among university students, that number was over one fifth, the highest since the Great Recession of the late 2000s. Young graduates face not only a tough labor market, but also global trade wars, persistent inflation, industrial automation and artificial intelligence.[206] In the United States, the youth unemployment rate (16–24) was 7.5% in May 2023, the lowest in 70 years.[207] American high-school graduates could join the job market right away,[208] with employers offering them generous bonuses, high wages, and apprenticeship programs in order to offset the ongoing labor shortage.[209] Generation Z in the United States is projected to be richer than previous generations at the same age thanks to higher wage growth and greater inheritance from their parents and grandparents, who have accumulated enormous wealth.[210][211] As of 2023, members of Generation Z in North America and especially developing Asian nations were a much more optimistic about their economic prospects and more likely to believe in the value of hard work than their counterparts in developed Asia, Western Europe, or Latin America.[92] As workers, Generation Z tends to prioritize a financial security, meaning, and their own well-being. They also value a work–life balance.[212] EducationTIMSS 4th-grade average math scores (2019) TIMSS 4th-grade average science scores (2019) Since the mid-20th century, enrollment rates in primary schools has increased significantly in developing countries.[213] In 2019, the OECD completed a study showing that while education spending was up 15% over the previous decade, academic performance had stagnated.[214] Results from Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) in 2019 showed that the highest-scoring students in mathematics came from Asian polities and Russia.[214] The OECD's Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) tests administered in 2022 unveiled the continuation of a long-term decline in reading and mathematical skills since the early 2010s. In other words, the COVID-19 pandemic was only one contributing factor.[215][216] Even so, fifteen-year-old students (tenth graders) from Singapore, Macau, Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan were largely unaffected or even saw an improvement. Once high-performing European countries—Iceland, Sweden, and Finland—continued their years-long decline. The U.S. national average remained behind those of other industrialized nations.[217][218] East Asian and Singaporean students consistently earned the top spots in international standardized tests in the 2010s[219][220][221] and 2020s.[215][217][218] Globally, reading comprehension and numeracy have been declining.[215][144] As of the 2020s, young women have outnumbered men in higher education across the developed world.[222] By 2024, many places around the world have decided to ban the use of mobile phones in the classroom to help their students concentrate better.[223] Different nations and territories approach the question of how to nurture gifted students differently. During the 2000s and 2010s, whereas the Middle East and East Asia (especially China, Hong Kong, and South Korea) and Singapore actively sought them out and steered them towards top programs, Europe and the United States had in mind the goal of inclusion and chose to focus on helping struggling students. In 2010, for example, China unveiled a decade-long National Talent Development Plan to identify able students and guide them into STEM fields and careers in high demand; that same year, England dismantled its National Academy for Gifted and Talented Youth and redirected the funds to help low-scoring students get admitted to elite universities.[224] Developmental cognitive psychologist David Geary observed that Western educators remained "resistant" to the possibility that even the most talented of schoolchildren needed encouragement and support and tended to concentrate on low performers. In addition, even though it is commonly believed that past a certain IQ benchmark (typically 120), practice becomes much more important than cognitive abilities in mastering new knowledge, recently published research papers based on longitudinal studies, such as the Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth (SMPY) and the Duke University Talent Identification Program, suggest otherwise.[224] Among developed nations, young women have been outnumbering men in tertiary education during the 2020s, reversing a historical trend. At the same time, the number of men in their 20s who are in neither education, employment, or training (NEET) has been rising. In France and the United Kingdom, this number has surpassed that of women.[222] Since the early 2000s, the number of students from emerging economies going abroad for higher education has risen markedly. This was a golden age of growth for many Western universities admitting international students.[225] In the late 2010s, around five million students traveled abroad each year for higher education, with the developed world being the most popular destinations and China the biggest source of international students.[225] In 2019, the United States was the most popular destination for international students, with 30% of its international student body coming from mainland China, Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Japan.[226] Among children of the Chinese ruling class ("princelings"), attending elite institutions in the United States was commonplace and seen as a status symbol,[227] but the deterioration of Sino-American relations as exemplified by President Donald Trump's entry restrictions on Chinese students in addition to the complications produced by the COVID-19 pandemic reduced the number of Chinese students enrolling in many American colleges and universities.[228][225] But even before the pandemic, undergraduate and graduate enrollments of native-born American citizens have both been in decline,[229][230] while trade schools continue to attract growing numbers of students due to a shortage of high-skilled blue-collar workers.[231][232] Since the 2000s, numerous institutions of higher learning have permanently closed.[233][234] These trends have led to the speculation that the higher-education bubble in the United States might deflate.[228][225] But among the top colleges and universities, there is still growth in the number of applicants.[235] This is due partly to students sending their applications to more schools for a chance of getting admitted[236] and because these institutions have not significantly expanded their capacities.[237] Although international enrollments rebounded post-pandemic,[238] with a surge of students coming from India and sub-Saharan Africa,[239] dependency on foreign students is a long-term liability for many American schools,[240] which now face a political zeitgeist that has turned against immigration.[238] Meanwhile, in Canada, the government has cut the number of international student visas granted each year in response to growing public disapproval of current levels of immigration.[241] The same thing happened in Australia.[242] Because China's expansion of higher education was done for political rather than economic reasons, the country is currently overproducing university graduates, who are struggling to find white-collar jobs that match their education.[243] In 2023, as many as one in five Chinese graduates struggled to find gainful employment.[244] Enrollment in higher education was just under 60% during the early 2020s, compared to around 40% in the United States.[243] In response, the government has recommended that students and their families consider vocational training programs to fill factory jobs.[245] Health issuesMentalIn general, teenagers and young adults are especially vulnerable to depression and anxiety due to the changes to the brain during adolescence.[246] While materially well off, young people today commonly perceive the world in which they live to be highly precarious, complex, and ambiguous, which has a negative effect on their mental well-being.[247] A 2025 survey found that 46% of American Generation Z members had been diagnosed with a mental health condition.[248] A 2020 meta-analysis found that the most common psychiatric disorders among adolescents were ADHD, anxiety disorders, behavioral disorders, and depression, consistent with a previous one from 2015.[249] Data from the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) indicate that while the percentages of teenagers reporting mental-health issues (such as psychological distress and loneliness) remained approximately the same during the 2000s, they steadily increased during the 2010s.[250] While the COVID-19 pandemic has damaged the mental health of people of all ages, the increase was most noticeable for people aged 15 to 24. A 2021 UNICEF report stated that 13% of ten- to nineteen-year-olds around the world had a diagnosed mental health disorder and that suicide was the fourth most common cause of death among fifteen- to nineteen-year-olds. It commented that "disruption to routines, education, recreation, as well as concern for family income, health and increase in stress and anxiety, [caused by the COVID-19 pandemic] is leaving many children and young people feeling afraid, angry and concerned for their future." It also noted that the pandemic had widely disrupted mental health services.[251] Anxiety over climate change has compounded the problem.[252] Though males remain more likely than females to commit suicide, the prevalence of suicide among teenage girls has risen significantly during the 2010s in many countries.[253] For example, data from the British National Health Service (NHS) showed that in England, hospitalizations for self-harm doubled among teenage girls between 1997 and 2018, but there was no parallel development among boys.[21] In some Western countries—Australia, the Netherlands, Spain, the United Kingdom, and parts of the United States—intervention programs have been set up to prevent depression among teenagers. However, funding has been limited.[246] Sleep deprivationSleep deprivation is on the rise among contemporary youths,[254][23] due to a combination of poor sleep hygiene, caffeine intake, beds that are too warm, a mismatch between biologically preferred sleep schedules at around puberty and social demands, insomnia, growing homework load, and having too many extracurricular activities.[23][24] Consequences of sleep deprivation include low mood, worse emotional regulation, anxiety, depression, increased likelihood of self-harm, suicidal ideation, and impaired cognitive functioning.[23][24] In addition, teenagers and young adults who prefer to stay up late tend to have high levels of anxiety, impulsivity, alcohol intake, and tobacco smoking.[255] A study by Glasgow University found that the number of schoolchildren in Scotland reporting sleep difficulties increased from 23% in 2014 to 30% in 2018. 37% of teenagers were deemed to have low mood (33% males and 41% females), and 14% were at risk of depression (11% males and 17% females). Older girls faced high pressure from schoolwork, friendships, family, career preparation, maintaining a good body image and good health.[256] In Canada, teenagers sleep on average between 6.5 and 7.5 hours each night, much less than what the Canadian Paediatric Society recommends, 10 hours.[257] According to the Canadian Mental Health Association, only one out of five children who needed mental health services received it. In Ontario, for instance, the number of teenagers getting medical treatment for self-harm doubled in 2019 compared to ten years prior. The number of suicides has also gone up. Various factors that increased youth anxiety and depression include over-parenting,[258] perfectionism (especially with regards to schoolwork),[259] social isolation, social-media use, financial problems, housing worries, and concern over some global issues such as climate change.[260] Cognitive abilitiesIn many countries, Generation Z youth are more likely to be diagnosed with intellectual disabilities and psychiatric disorders than older generations.[261][249] A 2010 meta-analysis by an international team of mental health experts found that the worldwide prevalence of intellectual disability (ID) was around one percent. But the share of individuals with such a condition in low- to middle-income countries were up to twice as high as their wealthier counterparts. The researchers also found that ID was more common among children and adolescents than adults.[261] A 2020 literature review and meta-analysis confirmed that the incidence of ID was indeed more common than estimates from the early 2000s.[249] In 2013, a team of neuroscientists from the University College London published a paper on how neurodevelopmental disorders can affect a child's educational outcome. They found that up to 10% of the human population have specific learning disabilities or about two to three children in a (Western) classroom. Such conditions include dyscalculia, dyslexia, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and autism spectrum disorder.[262][263] A 2017 study from the Dominican Republic suggests that students from all sectors of the educational system utilize the Internet for academic purposes, yet those from lower socioeconomic backgrounds tend to rank the lowest in terms of reading comprehension skills.[264] A 2020 report by psychologist John Protzko analyzed over 30 studies and found that children have become better at delaying gratification over the previous 50 years, corresponding to an average increase of 0.18 standard deviations per decade on the IQ scale. This is contrary to the opinion of the majority of the 260 cognitive experts polled (84%), who thought this ability was deteriorating. Researchers test this ability using the Marshmallow Test. Children are offered treats: if they are willing to wait, they get two; if not, they only get one. The ability to delay gratification is associated with positive life outcomes, such as better academic performance, lower rates of substance use, and healthier body weights. Possible reasons for improvements in the delaying gratification include higher standards of living, better-educated parents, improved nutrition, higher preschool attendance rates, more test awareness, and environmental or genetic changes. Some other cognitive abilities, such as simple reaction time, color acuity, working memory, the complexity of vocabulary usage, and three-dimensional visuospatial reasoning have shown signs of secular decline.[18] In a 2018 paper, cognitive scientists James R. Flynn and Michael Shayer argued that the observed gains in IQ during the 20th century—commonly known as the Flynn effect—had either stagnated or reversed, as can be seen from a combination of IQ and Piagetian tests. In the Nordic nations, there was a clear decline in general intelligence starting in the 1990s, an average of 6.85 IQ points if projected over 30 years. In Australia and France, the data remained ambiguous; more research was needed. In the United Kingdom, young children experienced a decline in the ability to perceive weight and heaviness, with heavy losses among top scorers. In German-speaking countries, young people saw a fall in spatial reasoning ability but an increase in verbal reasoning skills. In the Netherlands, preschoolers and perhaps schoolchildren stagnated (but seniors gained) in cognitive skills. What this means is that people were gradually moving away from abstraction to concrete thought. On the other hand, the United States continued its historic march towards higher IQ, a rate of 0.38 per decade, at least up until 2014. South Korea saw its IQ scores growing at twice the average U.S. rate. The secular decline of cognitive abilities observed in many developed countries might be caused by diminishing marginal returns due to industrialization and to intellectually stimulating environments for preschoolers, the cultural shifts that led to frequent use of electronic devices, the fall in cognitively demanding tasks in the job market in contrast to the 20th century, and possibly dysgenic fertility.[265] Physical![]() A 2015 study found that the frequency of nearsightedness has doubled in the United Kingdom within the last 50 years. Ophthalmologist Steve Schallhorn, chairman of the Optical Express International Medical Advisory Board, noted that research has pointed to a link between the regular use of handheld electronic devices and eyestrain. The American Optometric Association sounded the alarm in a similar vein.[266] According to a spokeswoman, digital eyestrain, or computer vision syndrome, is "rampant, especially as we move toward smaller devices and the prominence of devices increase in our everyday lives." Symptoms include dry and irritated eyes, fatigue, eye strain, blurry vision, difficulty focusing, headaches. However, the syndrome does not cause vision loss or any other permanent damage. To alleviate or prevent eyestrain, the Vision Council recommends that people limit screen time, take frequent breaks, adjust the screen brightness, change the background from bright colors to gray, increase text sizes, and blinking more often. Parents should not only limit their children's screen time but should also lead by example.[267] While food allergies have been observed by doctors since ancient times and virtually all foods can be allergens, research by the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota found they have been growing increasingly common since the early 2000s. Today, one in twelve American children has a food allergy, with peanut allergy being the most prevalent type. Reasons for this remain poorly understood.[268] Nut allergies in general have quadrupled and shellfish allergies have increased 40% between 2004 and 2019. In all, about 36% of American children have some kind of allergy. By comparison, this number among the Amish in Indiana is 7%. Allergies have also risen ominously in other Western countries. In the United Kingdom, for example, the number of children hospitalized for allergic reactions increased by a factor of five between 1990 and the late 2010s, as did the number of British children allergic to peanuts. In general, the better developed the country, the higher the rates of allergies.[269] Reasons for this remain poorly understood.[268] One possible explanation, supported by the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, is that parents keep their children "too clean for their own good". They recommend exposing newborn babies to a variety of potentially allergenic foods, such as peanut butter before they reach the age of six months. According to this "hygiene hypothesis", such exposures give the infant's immune system some exercise, making it less likely to overreact. Evidence for this includes the fact that children living on a farm are consistently less likely to be allergic than their counterparts who are raised in the city, and that children born in a developed country to parents who immigrated from developing nations are more likely to be allergic than their parents are.[269] A research article published in 2019 in the journal The Lancet reported that the number of South Africans aged 15 to 19 being treated for HIV increased by a factor of ten between 2010 and 2019. This is partly due to improved detection and treatment programs. However, less than 50% of the people diagnosed with HIV went onto receive antiviral medication due to social stigma, concerns about clinical confidentiality, and domestic responsibilities. While the annual number of deaths worldwide due to HIV/AIDS has declined from its peak in the early 2000s, experts warned that this venereal disease could rebound if the world's booming adolescent population is left unprotected.[270] Data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics reveal that 46% of Australians aged 18 to 24, about a million people, were overweight in 2017 and 2018. That number was 39% in 2014 and 2015. Obese individuals face higher risks of type II diabetes, heart disease, osteoarthritis, and stroke. The Australian Medical Associated and Obesity Coalition have urged the federal government to levy a tax on sugary drinks, to require health ratings, and to regulate the advertisement of fast foods. In all, the number of Australian adults who are overweight or obese rose from 63% in 2014–15 to 67% in 2017–18.[271] Puberty in girls![]() Globally, there is evidence that girls in Generation Z experienced puberty at considerably younger ages compared to previous generations, with implications for their welfare and their future.[272][273][274][275][276] The prevalence of allergies among adolescents and young adults in this cohort is greater than in the general population.[268][269] In Europe and the United States, the average age of the onset of puberty among girls was around 13 in the early 21st century, down from about 16 a hundred years earlier. Early puberty is associated with a variety of mental health issues, such as anxiety and depression (as people at this age tend to strongly desire conformity with their peers), early sexual activity, substance use, tobacco smoking, eating disorders, and disruptive behavioral disorders.[272] Girls who mature early also face higher risks of sexual harassment. Moreover, in some cultures, pubertal onset remains a marker of readiness for marriage, for, in their point of view, a girl who shows signs of puberty might engage in sexual intercourse or risk being assaulted, and marrying her off is how she might be 'protected'.[273] To compound matters, factors known for prompting mental health problems are themselves linked to early pubertal onset; these are early childhood stress, absent fathers, domestic conflict, and low socioeconomic status. Possible causes of early puberty could be positive, namely improved nutrition, or negative, such as obesity and stress.[272] Other triggers include genetic factors, high body-mass index (BMI), exposure to endocrine-disrupting substances that remain in use, such as Bisphenol A (found in some plastics) and dichlorobenzene (used in mothballs and air deodorants), and to banned but persistent chemicals, such as dichlorodiphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT) and dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (DDE), and perhaps a combination thereof (the 'cocktail effect').[276][277] A 2019 meta-analysis and review of the research literature from all inhabited continents found that between 1977 and 2013, the age of pubertal onset among girls has fallen by an average of almost three months per decade, but with significant regional variations, ranging from 10.1 to 13.2 years in Africa to 8.8 to 10.3 years in the United States. This investigation relies on measurements of thelarche (initiation of breast tissue development) using the Tanner scale rather than self-reported menarche (first menstruation) and MRI brain scans for signs of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis being reactivated.[276] Furthermore, there is evidence that sexual maturity and psychosocial maturity no longer coincide; 21st-century youth appears to be reaching the former before the latter. Neither adolescents nor societies are prepared for this mismatch.[274][275][g] Political views and participation
Generation Z initially held left-wing political views,[278] but has been moving towards the right since the early 2020s.[279][280][281] Moreover, there is a significant gender gap in political views among the young around the world.[282][283] Polling on immigration in various countries receives mixed responses from Generation Z.[284][285] Among developed democracies, young people's faith in the institutions, including their own government, has declined compared to that of previous generations.[94] Among respondents aged 15–29, trust in their national governments was the lowest in Greece, Italy, the United States, the United Kingdom, and South Korea, and highest in New Zealand, Ireland, Finland, Lithuania, and Switzerland.[286] In Australia, where members of Generation Z as a group feel alienated by mainstream politics, about half vote only to avoid a fine. Voting is compulsory in that country.[287] An early political movement primarily driven by Generation Z was School Strike for Climate of the late 2010s. The movement involved millions of young people around the world who followed the footsteps of Swedish activist Greta Thunberg to skip school in order to protest in favor of greater action on climate change.[288][289] Around the world, large numbers of people from this cohort feel angry, anxious, guilty, helpless, and sad about climate change and are dissatisfied with how their governments have responded so far.[252] However, their consumption choices (see above) reveal a gap between their stated values and their activism.[183][184][185] In tandem with more members of Generation Z being able to vote in elections during the late 2010s and early 2020s, the youth vote has increased in both Europe and the United States.[290][291] In Australia, Millennials and Generation Z outnumbered the Baby Boomers as voters by the 2025 federal election.[292] By the mid-2020s, young adults on both sides of the North Atlantic have demonstrated a willingness to vote for the populist right.[293] In Europe, voters from Generation Z swung from favoring the Greens in the 2019 European Parliament elections to supporting parties of the (far) right in 2024.[279][293] In the United States, while Generation Z might still support some left-wing causes like the Millennials,[278][294] they have shifted noticeably towards the right since 2020 as their priorities change.[280][295] Polls consistently show that the Democratic Party has been steadily hemorrhaging support among young adults during the late 2010s and early 2020s, even though they largely disapprove of the Republican Party.[296][297][298] By the early 2020s, young voters in Europe have become increasingly concerned about the rising cost of living, violent crime, declining public services in rural areas, immigration, and the Russo-Ukrainian War.[279] In Canada, voters under the age of 30 are most worried about the housing shortage, the cost of living, and crime rates; they, especially men, favored the Conservatives by a sizeable margin in 2025.[299] In the United States, the single most important issue for Generation Z is the economy (including inflation; the costs of housing, healthcare, and higher education; income inequality; and taxes).[300][301] Political scientist Jean-Yves Camus dismissed the stereotype of young people altruistically voting for green or left-wing parties as misguided and outdated.[279] Living as young adults in what they perceive as a volatile world, they crave security.[280] Compared to older cohorts, young voters of the 2020s have grown up with dimmer economic prospects and as such are more likely to think of life as a zero-sum competition for scarce resources and opportunities.[293] Multinational polls conducted in the early 2020s reveal that with Generation Z, the age-old pattern of younger cohorts holding more liberal or progressive sociopolitical views than their elders is no longer true in general.[302] Nevertheless, in Australia, not only does Generation Z start out as more liberal than their predecessors when they were at the same age, they also do not transition towards conservatism at the same rate as they get older.[292] But these broad trends conceal a significant gender divide across the Western world, with young women (under 30) being left-leaning and young men being right-leaning on a variety of issues from immigration to sexual harassment.[282][303] Both young men and young women are willing to vote for politically extreme parties or candidates. In the United Kingdom, young women are tilting heavily towards the Green Party whereas in the United States, both young men and young women have swung towards the nationalistic populist Donald Trump and his Republican Party.[293] Some individuals who support gender equality are hesitant to identify as "feminist" because there are different interpretations of what the term represents in contemporary society.[302] Furthermore, the backlash against feminism among young men is quite strong in many countries; older men tend to hold similar views to women across age groups on this topic.[283][304] Significant numbers of Gen-Z men support traditional gender roles,[305] believe that it is much harder to be a man today,[304] and that women's emancipation has gone too far and has come at their expense.[302] This political sex gap has been noticeable since the 2000s, but has widened since the mid-2010s. This growing difference has also been observed among young adults in China and South Korea.[283] Across the Western world, young men's socioeconomic status has been on the decline relative to young women's,[293] something certain online influencers such as Andrew Tate exploit in order to cultivate in their followers a zero-sum mindset and a deep resentment for women.[304] Anti-feminist circles—the manosphere—have attracted large numbers of Gen-Z men in Australia[305] and South Korea.[306] This polarization of the sexes is exacerbated by social media.[283][304] Politically engaged members of Generation Z are more likely than their elders to avoid buying from or working for companies that do not share their sociopolitical views, and they take full advantage of the Internet as activists.[94] Consequently, maintaining a presence on social media networks, especially TikTok, is vital for politicians and political parties dependent upon the youth vote,[279][294][298] such as the Left (Die Linke) and the Alternative for Germany (AfD), the two most popular German political parties among young voters in the 2025 federal election.[307] Social media are platforms using which those on the margins of politics can directly address the public, eroding the advantages of establishment figures.[293] Moreover, 2025 has been a turning point in Australian politics as the three major political parties—the Labor Party, the Liberal-National Coalition, and the Green Party—all spent considerable resources campaigning on TikTok, vying for youth support.[292] For their part, members of Generation Z are also influenced by the political views of the people they follow on social media.[302] Outside of Western countries, Generation Z has been politically active, too. In Iran, activists, most of whom women, took to the streets in 2022 to voice their disapproval of their government after 22-year-old Mahsa Amini died in morality police custody; she was arrested for allegedly violating the state's Islamic dress code.[308] In Bangladesh, students overthrew the autocratic regime of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in the July Revolution of 2024, putting an end to what they deemed an unfair quota system of the Bangladeshi civil service and a massacre.[309] In Kenya, young people, long faced with government corruption and economic precariousness despite being better educated that older generations, protested the 2024 tax hikes of President William Ruto.[310] In 2025, Generation Z took to the streets of Nepal to protest a ban on social media platforms (which was later lifted) and the extravaganza and nepotism of the ruling class; they also toppled the communist government of Prime Minister Sharma Oli.[311][312] This cohort also demonstrated to voice their disapproval of their governments' corruption and economic mismanagement in Indonesia and the Philippines, taking advantage of social media to organize and plan their events.[313] Religious tendenciesIn the Middle East and North Africa, young people were much more pious in the early 2020s compared to the late 2010s.[314] Young Latin Americans of the 2020s are markedly more likely to be irreligious than the previous decade, making their region as a whole more secular. Those with higher education are especially likely to be religiously unaffiliated. Nevertheless, belief in astrology and spirituality remained common.[315] In Western Europe and North America, Generation Z is the least religious generation in history.[316][317][318] More members of Generation Z describe themselves as nonbelievers than any previous generation and reject religious affiliation, though many of them still describe themselves as spiritual.[318] The 2016 British Social Attitudes Survey found that 71% of people between the ages of 18 and 24 had no religion, compared to 62% the year before. A 2018 ComRes survey found two-thirds of the same age group have never attended church; among the remaining third, 20% went a few times a year, and 2% multiple times per week.[319] According to British Office for National Statistics (ONS), people under the age of 40 in England and Wales are more likely to consider themselves irreligious rather than Christian.[320] In Canada, 43% of people aged 15 to 35 were religiously unaffiliated in 2021. Young Canadian adults, who are much more likely to have higher education than their counterparts in other countries of the OECD in the 2020s, tend to have a negative opinion of religion, viewing it as incompatible with modernity.[321] In the United States, Millennials and Generation Z are driving the growth of secularism.[322] In particular, young women are leaving religion at a faster pace than young men.[323] Atheism is more common among Generation Z than in prior generations.[324] Risky behaviorsAdolescent pregnancy![]() Adolescent pregnancy has been in decline during the early 21st century all across the industrialized world, due to the widespread availability of contraception and the growing avoidance of sexual intercourse among teenagers.[325] In the European Union and the United Kingdom, teenage parenthood has fallen 58% and 69%, respectively, between the 1990s and the 2020s.[326] In New Zealand, the pregnancy rate for females aged 15 to 19 dropped from 33 per 1,000 in 2008 to 16 in 2016. Highly urbanized regions had adolescent pregnancy rates well below the national average whereas Māori communities had much higher than average rates. In Australia, it was 15 per 1,000 in 2015.[325] In the United States, teenage pregnancy rates continued to decline, reaching 13.5 in 2022, the lowest on record.[327] Northern European countries, above all the Netherlands, have some of the world's lowest teenage pregnancy and abortion rates by implementing thorough sex education.[328] Alcoholism and substance use2020 data from the UK Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed on a per-capita basis, members of Generation Z binged on alcohol 20% less often than Millennials. However, 9.9% of people aged 16 to 24 consumed at least one drug in the past month, usually cannabis, or more than twice the share of the population between the ages of 16 and 59. "Cannabis has now taken over from the opiates in terms of the most people in treatment for addiction," psychopharmacologist Val Curran of the University College London (UCL) told The Telegraph. Moreover, the quality and affordability of various addictive drugs have improved in recent years, making them an appealing alternative to alcoholic beverages for many young people, who now have the ability to arrange a meeting with a dealer via social media. Addiction psychiatrist Adam Winstock of UCL found using his Global Drug Survey that young people rated cocaine more highly than alcohol on the basis of value for money, 4.8 compared to 4.7 out of 10.[329] A |