The Entitlement Epidemic:
Eroding Our Financial Future
Today,
it seems all too common that young people have very little appreciation
for the
concept of “work ethic”.
The
implications of this as it relates to the near crisis financial
statistics in North America are huge.
Jobs
are prolific and as a result, many young people don’t seem to
understand
commitment or work ethic. They
expect to
have everything they want, when they want it; and when they
don’t they just
move on, leaving a wake of hard-working, committed business owners and
managers
behind. They will
often not move on
quietly either. If
they expect something
they don’t receive, they can be verbally abusive to the
innocent shopkeeper
behind the counter.
Their
expectations are so high they become impatient or don’t even
see the value in
what they’re doing or learning at the time.
Their respect for work and for training is
negligible.
What
I’ve discovered from sharing my story with my peers about a
young employee I
had is that everyone has at least one version and often multiple
versions of
the same story.
In
North America, our youth are still looking for
job security and high pay, with
complete flexibility and lots of time off.
They are still telling themselves they will
save a lot of money so they
can buy a house in 5 years’ time and save for retirement
after that. They
are completely closed-minded to the idea
that you can learn how to buy real estate and create income in other
ways
besides working at whatever job seems to offer the highest pay and most
rewards
at the time.
Personal
debt levels are at record highs and savings rates at record lows. The way out of this mess
is not to cut back
spending and save more money. The
answer
is to learn how to earn more money and to re-ignite the entrepreneurial
spirit
in young people like it has been for people in overseas countries
– namely China and India.
Yes,
today’s youth are facing an uncertain future, as the largest
and most powerful
generation in the world, the baby boomers, will be retiring. And yes, there are
organizations that support
and recognize the youth who will become our future leaders. There are also some
amazing young people who
get inspired by a cause and commit their time, and their piggy bank to
do what
many adults don’t even think of doing.
The question is, will enough of our youth be
ready and prepared to take
on the challenges their generation faces?
Is there enough training and support to raise
financially independent,
hard-working, inspired, future leaders?
The
young person in my story decided she wasn’t getting the
training she wanted
despite being paid to review a very expensive CD program from one of
the top
professionals in her field. After
less
than 2 months, she decided she wanted more security and to be involved
personally with the company’s consultants.
I’m not sure what she expected
besides her regular paycheck but she
certainly wasn’t going to be the junior person in a start-up
organization and
have personal access to $1000-an-hour consultants.
She decided to look for work while continuing
to accept the payment for her training then gave 2 days’
notice and expected to
be paid the day she left – hmm.
I
guess I should be so lucky; my brother owns a catering company and has
shown up
many times for work to find that the person who was supposed to start
early on
food preparation for that day just didn’t show up because
they were too tired
from being out late the night before.
There
are also the poor employers of young people who don’t service
the clients
because a) it’s their break time or b) the request by the
customer is something
they don’t want to do or c) it was slightly outside the
normal course of
business.
The
bottom line is the entitlement mentality is becoming an epidemic. And that’s a
problem because this Generation
Y, as its known, expects to have all the benefits the current
generation has
worked hard for without the commitment to make it happen. There are too few young
leaders who take up
the challenges of our society. Those
that do step up need support, and unfortunately this means they will
have to
work alongside the growing number of youth who jump from job to job and
pay for
things on credit they don’t have money for, and then look to
parents or the
government to bail them out when they can’t make things work
for themselves.
One
of my favorite success stories is a young woman who opted to work as
consultant, rather than settling for an entry-level job right out of
school. Her income
jumped from $1500 per
month to $7500 in 4 months because she followed her passion. Another young woman I know
(still in high
school) is very interested in fashion.
Rather than take a retail job she found a way
to open her own “shop” in
the back of another store.
There
are examples all around of young people who are making a difference
– just a
few more of them who aren’t.
It’s time
for business owners, teachers, parents, and other would-be
“mentors” to stop
bailing out our young people. “Generation Y” needs
to take responsibility for
their actions and to be committed to the decisions they make. We have to help more of
them learn to earn a
living for themselves so they understand the commitment and
responsibility the
people who employ them take on when they hire them.
We have to help them understand that when
they learn these skills they actually can have the securities and
freedoms they
want when they want them. We
have to
help them learn how to earn so they can be part of the change we so
desperately
need in North
America
to maintain our independence and financial
freedoms.

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Money
expert Tracy Piercy, CFP is the founder and CEO of MoneyMinding
Inc., a wealth building system that turns conventional money wisdom upside-down. MoneyMinding offers a
turn-key marketing and coaching program for
advisors who understand the importance of empowering their clients with
education, and are looking for a system to streamline their client
financial
education process. To
learn more and receive the free wealth building report, visit www.moneyminding.com.
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