The Case Against Rate Hikes for Millennials

It may be inconceivable to the moneyed class, but there are in fact very good reasons not to raise interest rates quickly or dramatically. Yes, inflation is worryingly high, Ukraine is burning and Covid-19 still threatens to upend supply chains. However, the reality many Americans face — if not low-income and middle-class workers across the globe — is quite different from what the stock market and go-to suite of economic indicators tell us.

Millions of Americans haven’t yet recovered from the Covid-19 recession. Black unemployment, at 6.6%, remains stubbornly higher than the overall rate of 3.8%, and is double the figure for Whites. Unemployment among Black women actually rose in February from the previous month. The gender pay gap also remains wide — women are paid on average 22% less than men — and financial security is elusive. Just 9% of low earners say their pay had kept up with the cost of living, even as wage growth broadly accelerates.

Young savers, meanwhile, were hit disproportionately by the pandemic, with 32% of millennials and 23% of Gen-Z owing more credit card debt than they have in emergency funds. That compares with 15% for Baby Boomers, holders of half the nation’s wealth, whose net worth rose by $15.5 trillion, or 28%, since the first quarter of 2020. The figure climbed 65% for Gen X.

It’s against this backdrop that recent comments by BlackRock Inc. co-founder Rob Kapito, who earned more than $24 million in 2020, hit a nerve. “For the first time, this generation is going to go into a store and not be able to get what they want,” he said. “And we have a very entitled generation that has never had to sacrifice.” (It’s unclear whether he was referring to Gen-Z or millennials.)

Kapito isn’t wrong to point out the broader trend of what he called “scarcity inflation,” triggered by a shortage of everything from workers and houses to oil and fertilizer. It would seem, though, that the impact has little to do with entitlement. If anything, the young deserve a more secure future than the hand they’ve been dealt — in 2008 by the excessive risk-taking of a rapacious horde of financiers and in 2020 by the plain bad luck of the Covid-19 outbreak.