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Millennials are not all worse off than their baby boomer counterparts, a new study from the University of Cambridge found after analyzing major differences in the life trajectories and wealth ...
Millennials, a new study says, have opted to leave areas ripe with amenities such as restaurants and parks for those with larger and less expensive housing. Jordan Vonderhaar / Bloomberg.
Millennials more than any other generation think it's important to "look or appear" financialle successful, according to a recent Wells Fargo study.
Millennials are seeking more professional help for health issues than ever, a new study revealed. Conducted by United Healthcare and Health Action Council, the study explored factors and claims ...
Millennials, the generation of young Americans born after 1982, may not be the caring, socially conscious environmentalists some have portrayed them to be, according to a study described in the ...
Millennials really hate advertising, study finds — here’s why. By Marissa Lang, Tech Culture Reporter Updated May 5, 2016 6:00 a.m. Inked up. About 40 percent of Millennials have tattoos.
According to a new study released Monday, July 25, 2022, by the U.S. Census Bureau, by age 26 more than two-thirds of millennials lived in the same general area where they grew up, 80% had moved ...
Millennials were willing to spend $7 a day on coffee because it brings them joy, a new study finds. Getty Images/Maksym Belchenko "The phenomenon of trading financially sound decisions for short ...
The study also found that 10% of Millennials used online dating platforms or mobile apps. Stosch finds online dating "weird" but believes that technology has improved her social life in other ways.
Compared with people born from 1941 through 1949, incidence rates of appendix cancer have more than tripled among people born between 1976 and 1984 and more than quadrupled among people born between ...
Study: Millennials Are the Most Brand-Loyal Generation. Thanks to–you guessed it–social media, brand loyalty is higher than ever among the generation advertisers can’t get enough of.
Millennials are seeking more professional help for health issues than ever, a new study revealed. Conducted by United Healthcare and Health Action Council, the study explored factors and claims ...
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