Newswise — The report, Financial Lives in the Networked Generation, outlines how young people are increasingly turning to a mix of digitally mediated income streams—including gig work, content creation, and platform-based entrepreneurship—alongside new modes of borrowing, investing, and learning about money through social networks. The research is supported by UVA’s Thriving Youth in a Digital Economy institutional initiative.
“These shifts are not incremental—they represent a categorical transformation in how young people experience and understand money,” the authors note. “Traditional financial education models were not designed for this environment.”
Key Findings:
The report also highlights how economic precarity is shaping behavior. Many young adults face high housing costs, student debt, and wage stagnation—conditions that contribute to declining trust in traditional financial institutions and a growing belief that conventional paths to stability may be out of reach. At the same time, U.S. consumers are investing at much earlier ages than prior generations – The average age of first investment has dropped dramatically—for Boomers, the average was 35 years old; for Gen Z, it was 19.
As a result, some younger Americans are turning to high-risk financial strategies or “digital hustle” income streams, while others become targets for scams and exploitative financial products. The report identifies this dynamic as part of a broader pattern of “predatory inclusion,” in which new financial technologies expand access while simultaneously introducing new risks.
Crucially, the report finds that traditional financial literacy approaches have not kept pace with these changes. Designed for a more stable, institution-centered financial system, existing education models often fail to address the complexity of today’s digitally mediated, socially
networked financial environment—leaving many young people to learn instead from peers, influencers, and online communities. While there is bipartisan consensus about offering financial literacy to adolescents, there is no prevailing agreement or standard as to what that curriculum
should teach, or how.
The report calls for updated approaches to financial literacy and policy that reflect the realities of a digitally mediated financial system, where information, risk, and opportunity are increasingly shaped by platforms and online communities.
Key questions for policymakers and educators:
The report was authored by Lana Swartz, Maximilian Brichta, and Kate Larson.
For more information or to connect with the researchers, contact UVA Media Relations or visit Dr. Swartz’s Newswise profile:
About TYDE
Access to social media and digital technology has transformed the experience of childhood and adolescence around the world. At the same time, there is an alarming rise in rates of mental and behavioral health difficulties among young people. Public health authorities argue that there is a causal relationship between these two dynamics–yet despite widespread concern, the reality is that there is little rigorous research on the precise dynamics of youth technology use. UVA’s TYDE, which is an institutional and cross-disciplinary initiative, meets this public health challenge by mobilizing and expanding significant research expertise across UVA to address the youth mental health crisis and understand its relationship to technology.
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