Why Gen Y may survive recession better than Gen X, boomers

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November 3, 2008, 02:30 PM —  CIO.com — 

You'd think Generation Y professionals would be the least equipped to weather a recession and layoffs. After all, this is the generation whose "helicopter parents" hovered over their every move, catered to their every caprice and taught them that they were all winners.

This is also the generation that's proven very demanding in the workplace. According to a CareerBuilder survey from 2007, 74 percent of employers say Gen Y workers expect to be paid more; 56 percent of employers say Gen Y workers expect to be promoted within a year; and half say Gen Y professionals expect more vacation and personal time than older generations.

Generation Y is totally different from the generation that preceded it, the scrappy, do-it-yourself latch-key kids (like myself) who make up Generation X. As a result, they seem ill-prepared to handle the vicious vicissitudes of corporate life during an economic downturn.

But we may be underestimating Generation Y. Workplace and Gen Y experts say this group of whippersnappers may actually be better prepared to weather a recession and handle a layoff than Generation X and Boomers. Here's why.

1. They have weaker ties to corporate America.

Gen Y professionals are known for not feeling the same sense of loyalty to their employers that has bound members of Generation X and Baby Boomer to their jobs, says Lisa Orrell, a generational relations expert and author of Millenials Incorporated . That's because Generation Y saw first-hand what their Baby Boomer and older Gen X parents got for their loyalty to their employers during economic downturns: bupkus. They saw their parents get laid off. They saw their parents' pensions disappear. They saw their parents get meager severance packages. Consequently, says Orrell, these older generations taught their Gen Y kids to put their own well-being before their employers' needs.

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They work cheap, are flexible of the mind, and are productive

Gen Y will do well. Being the youngest generation in the workforce, they will be the most resilient to the psychological pressures of the downturn.

As a whole, they do work cheap, are agreeable to doing different tasks, and are relatively productive - especially compared to the baby boomers. A company is supposed to make money and and Gen Y definitely fits the bill when things get tight.
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