Millennials: Difference between revisions
Hi, My name is Cecelia Cichan, and I corrected/added my info on this page... |
|||
Line 42: | Line 42: | ||
** [[Nicky Hilton]], [[October 5]] (sister of [[Paris Hilton]]) |
** [[Nicky Hilton]], [[October 5]] (sister of [[Paris Hilton]]) |
||
*1984 |
*1984 |
||
** [[Johnny Woo]], [[March 30]] |
|||
** [[Mandy Moore]], [[April 10]] |
** [[Mandy Moore]], [[April 10]] |
||
** [[Laura Kate Smither]], [[April 23]] (died 1997) |
** [[Laura Kate Smither]], [[April 23]] (died 1997) |
Revision as of 06:30, 18 August 2004
Generation Y is a name for a western "generation" comprised of those born in the 1980s and 1990s although the exact birth years of this age demographic are not fixed. Many in Generation Y are the children of Baby Boomers, and the generation is also known as the echo generation, because it is the largest demographic grouping since the baby boom of the late 1940s-early 1960s.
Many labels have been attached to this generation, although none has been overwhelmingly accepted yet. The generation is also called the Millennial Generation, the Millennium Generation, the Net Generation, N-Gen, Generation NeXt or "NeXters," Generation 2000, Generation Y2K, the Sunshine Generation, the Bittersweet Generation, the Hip-hop Generation, the Digital Generation, the Explorers, generation.com, e-Generation, little x-ers, Generation i (for Internet), the Little Boomers, the Boomlet, Generation Can-do, Generation "WHY?", the Y-inistas, and the Bridgers. The name "Newmils" is popular in the UK, as is the term "Thatcher's Children." The term "echo" is most popular in Canada, inspired by David K. Foot and Daniel Stoffman's book Boom, Bust and Echo. The Y in Generation Y comes from the name Generation X sometimes given to the previous generation (Y immediately following X in the alphabet). In the Generations system of authors Strauss and Howe, the Millennial Generation, as they call it, is the generation of Americans born from 1982 to 2003 (assuming that this generation has a typical length).
60 million people were born between 1979 and 1994 in the United States [1]. Some demographers define those years as constituting the large baby bulge of the late 20th century in that country, and define people born between those years as the "echo generation." Those numbers mark the echo as slightly smaller than the Baby Boom (72 million), but much larger than Generation X (18 million). Birth rates in the United States peaked around 1989-90 and have dropped considerably since then, but remain higher than in the 1960s-70s.
The effect of the higher birth rates was felt first in schools. Higher enrollment, which was sometimes up 50-60% in a decade, made school budgetting difficult. Cut backs were made in many areas to maintain basic services.
While the echo was much larger than the previous cohorts, except the Baby Boom, the relative size of this generation is much smaller that the Baby Boom. The American population was much larger in the 1990s than in the 1950s or 60s. From 1946 to 1964, the U.S. total fertility rate averaged 3.3--high enough to double the population every two generations. Since 1980, it has averaged 1.9, which is below the so-called replacement rate. Families continued to get smaller than in previous decades, usually with only one or two children.
The child poverty rate was still relatively high in many western countries throughout the 1980s and 90s.
In many rich countries, the 1980s and 1990s were a period of rapidly falling birthrates, in Southern and Eastern Europe and Japan, and less markedly in Northern Europe, Generation Y is a dramatically smaller than any of its predecessors, and their childhood was marked by small families, both immediate and extended, small classes at school and school closure. This meant a lot of individual attention from parents in a period in which society was becoming intrinsically more risk averse.
In Eastern Europe, Generation Y is the first generation without mature memories of Communism or dictatorship. In newly rich countries such as South Korea or Greece, Generation Y has known nothing but developed world standards of living, while their grandparents often grew up in developing world conditions.
Year | Millions | Percent of Population |
---|---|---|
1950 | 47.3 | 31.1% |
1960 | 64.5 | 35.7% |
1970 | 69.8 | 34.0% |
1980 | 63.7 | 28.0% |
1990 | 64.2 | 25.7% |
1998 | 69.8 | 25.9% |
Source: [2]
Famous members of Generation Y
A listing of famous members of the Millennial generation with birth dates from 1982 through 2003 (and death dates for those that have died) includes the following:
- 1982
- 1983
- Michelle Branch, July 2
- Cecelia Cichan, April 10 (sole survivor of a plane crash)
- Nicky Hilton, October 5 (sister of Paris Hilton)
- 1984
- 1985
- 1986
- 1987
- Baby M (Melissa Stern)
- Bow Wow, March 9
- Hilary Duff, September 28
- Elizabeth Smart, November 5 (kidnapping victim)
- 1988
- 1989
- 1990
Cultural endowments
Generation Y's cultural endowments have included the following:
- Harry Potter series
- The Simpsons
- South Park
- Matrix series (movies, Wachowski brothers)
- The Lord of the Rings (movie trilogy, Peter Jackson)