A new economic study published in December 2025 warns that soaring housing costs are reshaping how young Americans view work, ambition, and success. Researchers say the growing gap between wages and home prices has created a sense of “housing despair” among Gen Z.
The study, titled “The Wealth Gap and Labor Motivation,” was authored by economists Donggyu Lee and Jae Young Yoo. It argues that belief in upward mobility is closely tied to asset ownership, especially homeownership—an outcome many young workers now see as unreachable.
According to the research, renters report “low work effort” at nearly twice the rate of homeowners. When buying a home feels mathematically impossible, young workers are less likely to push for promotions or long-term corporate advancement.
Instead, many Gen Z workers adopt what the study calls “pattern recognition” behavior, focusing on mental health, flexibility, and short-term stability rather than sacrificing well-being for distant financial rewards.
Why the Math No Longer Works for Gen Z
The study highlights several economic pressures that have turned homeownership from a challenge into a structural barrier:
| Metric (2025) | Statistic | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Median Wage (Ages 20–24) | $41,184 | Barely covers rent and student debt |
| Typical Down Payment (20%) | Over $100,000 | More than twice annual gross income |
| Youth Unemployment | 10.8% | Limits early career growth |
| Rent Increase Since 2020 | +28.7% | Prevents saving for a home |
A Generational Divide Over Work Ethic
The findings have fueled debate in workplaces across the country. About 81% of surveyed managers described the trend as “poor work ethic,” arguing that younger employees lack resilience and drive.
Gen Z workers, however, describe their behavior as a rational response to economic reality. Many say that working harder loses its motivational pull when extra effort still leaves them decades away from affording a modest home.
Despite labels like “quiet quitting,” the study notes that Gen Z effort has not disappeared. Instead, it has shifted toward side hustles, digital certifications, content creation, and freelance work, where individuals feel greater control over outcomes.
A National “Quarter-Life Crisis”
The study concludes that the U.S. is entering a nationwide “Quarter-Life Crisis.” Data from the National Bureau of Economic Research released in late 2025 shows that despair levels are now highest among people under 25, reversing decades of historical trends.
Economists warn that without policy action—such as housing affordability programs, wage growth, or student debt relief—the U.S. risks creating a permanent renting class, potentially weakening long-term labor productivity and economic growth.