Sunday, December 22, 2019

21.8% of Millennials say a friend referred them for their first job

21.8% of Millennials say a friend referred them for their first job21.8% of Millennials say a friend referred them for their first jobRecent research from CreditLoan.com found that21.8% of Millennials say a friend referred them for their first job, compared to 26.1% of Baby Boomers and 24.8% of those in Generation X. To arrive at these conclusions, Credit Loan surveyed 1,003 people who have worked before (from the ages 18 to 82) with Amazons Mechanical Turk.Heres how Americans found their first positionsWhen it comes to finding their first position, most people say that they were referred from a friend. While 19.5% of Millennials think that securing their first one was difficult, just 13.9% of Baby Boomers and 12.4% of those in Generation X felt the same way. Parents have also played a role in the job hunt.Heres why Americans started working for the first timeThe overwhelmingly popular answer was to earn money for discretionary purchases, with 75.7% of Baby Boomers, 74.1% of those in Generation X and also 74.1% of Millennials saying so. To save money for a house was the least popular reason why people started working, according to 1.7% of Baby Boomers, 2.6% of those in Generation X and 5.1% of Millennials.While the average age of people who started working because their parents made them was 16.5, the average age of people who did so to stash away cash for a home was 21.5.Scratching your head at that last part? Credit Loan addressed this in the blog post, reporting The major outlier in this survey comes from respondents who got their first job to save for a house. On average, they started working at age 21.5. People in this situation could be from mora affluent families and are entering the workforce later on average.How much average credit card debt people havePeople who started working to save up for a car have the most current average credit card debt at $5,062. But for those who did so for discretionary purchases, the number is $4,570. On the other end of t he spectrum, those who did so to put away money for a home have an average of $1,777.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.