Wednesday, December 3, 2008

A Recession is Just What Teens Need


One of my favorite stores is Plato's Closet, a thrift shop chain that offers gently used name-brand apparel at deep discounts. On a recent visit I bought a pair of Diesel jeans for $25 and a pair of Lucky Brand jeans for $20. I used to shop there by myself, but suddenly, many of my friends are eager to join me. Seems their parents, shell-shocked by their brokerage statements, have tightened the purse strings. Kathleen Lantz, who manages a Plato's Closet in Harrisonburg, Va., recently told the local paper there that business is booming, both in sales and consignments. "People really want to make that little bit of extra money and sell their clothes,” she said.

The recession has been tough on people my age. I’m 20, a member of a generation that has exhibited an unrivaled sense of material entitlement, and a virtually insatiable thirst for cars, computers, iPhones, and Xboxes. The Wall Street Journal’s Jeffrey Zaslow famously railed against my peers and me for internalizing the “you’re special” sentiments of Mr. Rogers. “But what often got lost in [Rogers’] self-esteem-building patter was the idea that being special comes from working hard and having high expectations for yourself,” Zaslow wrote.

It would take an act of God to get high school students to clip coupons, but buying used T-shirts is a start.

Now companies like Abercrombie & Fitch and video game retailer Gamestop have seen their stock plummet on weak consumer spending and a flight to lower-cost alternatives; Abercrombie's stock dropped to $19 a share after a high earlier this year of $84. Its more affordable competitor Aeropostale, on the other hand, reported same-store sales were up 1 percent in October, while Abercrombie’s fell by 20 percent.

Don't tell your kids this, but this is great news for young people, at least in the long term. It would take an act of God to get high school students clipping coupons between classes, but buying used T-shirts for $9 instead of new ones for $36 is a start. The economic turbulence, especially if it lasts as long as the more pessimistic prognosticators believe it will, may lead my generation to make better decisions than our parents did.

One of my theories about money is that the way people handle a bit of it while they’re young is the best predictor of how they'll handle more of it when they're older. When I was a little kid, I hoarded my $2 weekly allowance while my older brother spent his instantly. Today, we both earn more than $2 a week, but our respective spending habits remain the same. By instilling a focus on value shopping, the recession could lead young people to make better financial decisions later in life, when the stakes are much higher than Aeropostale versus Abercrombie.

Making all this worse (or better, depending on your perspective) is that restaurateurs have been hit harder by the consumer slowdown than just about any other industry. They’re also one of the largest employers of young workers. Many have dramatically cut back on expansion plans. The "Winter Break Help Wanted" signs aren't as common a sight as they were a year ago.

The Chicago-area Courier News recently spoke with Peggy Gundrum, director of Career Services at Elgin Community College, about the tough time teens are having finding work as they compete for fewer jobs with older, more experienced people who have been laid off. She said students can get work if they’re able to separate themselves from the pack. "You need to really review questions, practice, know how to respond. You really have to stand above everyone else with all the layoffs," she said. In other words, teens looking to raise cash to pay for cell phones and clothes will be forced to adapt to the changing environment by learning how to put together resumes, appear intelligent during interviews, and market themselves.

Many of my college peers are also nervous about graduation, partly because we've watched some of our older friends struggle to find good-paying jobs in the fields that interest them. One sophomore friend called me last night because she was concerned that she wouldn't be able to get a job in the fashion industry when she graduates. So we formulated a plan: Instead of worrying about the job market, we’ll go to the library together one night this week and email ten potential employers demonstrating knowledge of the industry and enthusiasm for their companies, asking them what she can do to make herself the ideal candidate when she graduates in 2011. Then, when she applies for those jobs in a couple of years, she can show them the emails and say, "You told me what to do, I did it, and here I am." I'm sure she has dozens of things she'd rather spend her evenings doing than sending emails, but it could position her for long-term success.

Much the way penny pinchers in their 80s are said still to harbor a Depression-era mentality, my debt-addicted peers are adopting a recession-era mentality. If they can carry it into their adult years, it will be to everyone’s benefit.

Zac Bissonnette is an editor with AOL Money & Finance and its new personal finance site WalletPOP.com. He is a sophomore at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Thoughts?

30 comments:

Mackenzie said...

I don't really have that much money all the time so I learned to clearance rack shop. Yeah it looks kind of cheesy while you're standing there digging for stuff, but the truth is you can find a lot of cool stuff if you dig. On the plus side you can usually get more for less money than spending 100 bucks on two T-shirts. So learning to shop at clearance or resale stores is a good life lesson: Try to get the most you can for less. :)

richmond lee 1 said...

Hmm, I was a little hurt when this guy said it would take an act of God to make kids clip coupons. I already look for coupons and I know a few kids who do as well. But I suppose he's referring to the majority of kids, not the weird minority who actually care.
Some of my friends call me stingy, but whenever there's an opportunity to save a few bucks, I jump on it. Rich kids don't understand what it means to have to work for something. I worked for about two years saving money so that I could buy my own car, and I did. So I get a little angry when some obnoxious rich brat gets a brand new SUV to haul his stupid butt around in when he finally gives his parents aneurysms with all of his whining.
I know this isn't everyone, some kids' parents care enough to instill worthwhile values in their childrens' heads, other parents aren't so admirable.
So maybe all this economic mayhem will teach everyone not to live so excessively and to look at money a little differently.
But I doubt it. I'm incredibly cynical and I think people will be just as stupid as they've always been, recession or no.

NickLiman1st said...

This recession has many cons, but the plus side? Americans are curbing their appetite for things with big price tags.

Maybe our generation will finally get it right and actually conserve money.

jakelabrec7 said...

i agree that this might help kids to pay more attention to how much they are spending and to be more concious about how they use their money. so i think that in the long run this will help alot of people out in the future but i can also hurt people in the future due to job layoffs.

Sarah Moore 2 said...

In my family my sister and I have learned use it wisely and i think that the more you can get form your money in the way of clothes the better.My parents normally give me twenty dollars when i shop so i don't like to go into abercrombie and spend it all at once and about the only you can get there for 20$ is a scarf so I look for sales and discount .I mean why should you be ridiculed for not using money wisely. instead of buying 300 hundred jeans with holes i am sure you can find some humanely priced jeans that would probably look better and tear them up yourself.So i have already learned to use my money wisley.

andrew villafranco 7th said...

This is a really great article because i am one of those kids who saves his money while everybody else is out and about spending. Everyday kids ask me how come I don't have a cellphone i tell them its because I'm saving up for a car they all think I'm dumb but i know come next year when they need a ride they will be asking me but that's besides the point. Our economical recession will cause many kids as well as adults to think about their money spending habits so in a way this bad situation the U.S. is in is a good thing it will help keep many people out of debt in the years to come.

DionePompa4 said...

Personally when i shop i look for sales i dont like to but shirts that are over 15 or 20 dollars and for pants i dont like going over 35. I grew up with a single mother who tried to work to support both of us with out child support so i'm pretty practiced in saving and coupon clipping. I honestly dont understand how people can spend more than a hundred dollars on a single outfit...to me that seems pretty ridiculous.

joshochoa54321 said...

i was a little offended when it said that it would take an act of god for teens to use coupons. i am not from a wealthy family, so we do everything to save money, and get the stuff we need, but the average american teenager spends more money on useless junk. but i do not think that the average teenerager would go buy clothes at and used clothes store, evn though we are in a recession. sure we are going to save money on thing, but moer than likely i will not see a preppey little girl shopping at a thrift store, rather than ambercombie, or hollister, or some other outragesly priced store.

Caitlin Linden 4 said...

I feel like I can look at a great deal of people at Lubbock High and see the narrow-mindedness that controls our nations youth. I partially speak out of jealously because I don't get to enjoy having: a car, a nice cell phone, cable, and expensive clothes. I find myself at work late on school nights, wasting away for minimum wage, and saving basically everything I earn. In a way I suppose I'm fortunate for not needing the newest electronic phenomenon to make me happy, at least it's cheaper.

Until I get on SNL I'll just make friends who have bukus of money.

OscarGuerrero_per1 said...

The recession is hitting everyone rich or poor. But at a group(especially our generation) we need to not worry so much about all the extras that life offers but try to get buy with what we have and hope for the best. Graduating from college and then going into the profession we want will be tough. But we are going to have to scout for the best ordeals we can catch.

Unknown said...

Well me im a spender so..i am the on who will spend..that 30 bucks for the 2 shirts.But i understand that we need to learn to save our money and actually invest in something that will benefit us in the end

Yvonne Rojas 4 said...

I've always been the kind of person that goes shopping like every weekend and never wear what I buy. But lately, I've been really stingy with my money because of this. I think that if none of this would have happened, many people like me would still be buying useless stuff.

Chris Rodriguez 7 said...

Its a very interesting article, teens need to get what they need and what they could afford, not jus anything they want for looks. If teens were to do this it would help out there parents alot by saving a couple of bucks for there parents to be saving for the future.

cindymedina-3 said...

It is kind of sad to see that materailistic things matter so much to our generation now a days. I have a job and pay for my car's gas, car insurance, lunch, stuff i need for school, clothes, etc. I have learned to streach my little paychecks by saving money any time i can. I have also learned how to balance work with school, which i think is very important to learn. I'm learning about the real world and how much life truely costs. My parents have taught me and guided along the way. Thanks to their tips, i'm able to spend on what i need, save, and treat myself every now and then.

AustinRittenberry4 said...

One thing that bothers me more than anything is kids that are spoiled. They get everything handed to them and they don't appreciate it at all. I have had a job since I was 15 and I have saved money and I have been frivolous on occasion but I learned the value of a dollar. I think that as a generation there are way to many kids that have not learned this lesson and in college or maybe after college when they start doing things on their own will be a rude awakening. I partly agree with the article that teens need to adopt money saving values. And I like Richmond was a little offended by some of the things this guy said but hey I'm a kid I don't think I have the right to be offended or the knowledge.

katiehaukos04 said...

The recession is having an impact on all generations, however it is showing my generation that life isn't going to be a smooth ride. As we make our way towards college, we are going to learn how hard it is go find a job, and that will only make us work harder. I believe, experiencing this recession at such a young age, is a good thing, because we will know how to more frugal with our money in the future. I know I am already saving every penny I get, and many of my friends are doing the same thing.

ClaireBurrus1 said...

I don't care what people think when i'm shopping on the clearance racks. I mean, if I can get clothes for less than half the price, why not? I love bargains. One of my favorite stores is Ross because the clothes there aren't too expensive. Anyway, I think we need the recession in a way to help us get our minds back on track. we were watching tv this morning and a commercial came on for a nintendo DS game (the baby one...) and my mom was like "do kids not play with dolls anymore?" that comment made me think. I used to babysit for this 9 year old girl and she had dolls but she wouldn't play with them. They just sat in the corner. She'd rather play games on the computer, wii... then i started thinking about when i was little. I loved playing with dolls.
I know that's kind of off topic but if as kids we can't even be satisfied with just a regular doll, what are we going to do when we can't afford the name brand clothes that everyone else has or the newest cell phone? I think that society puts way too much emphasis on what you wear, where you shop, if you use coupons or not... I don't think that should define who we are. Some of the nicest people i know are coupon clippers.

JenniferMcCandless1st said...

Reading this article I can picture some people that I know that buy things only becasue of their name. In which most of these people do not have jobs or have to pay for anything. Me, on the other hand has two jobs and has to pay for gas and anything extra I would like. Don't get me wrong, I'm not complaining, I hate asking my parents for money and I believe I am old enough to work, so I'm old enough to pay for most things. I don't think most teens are afraid of clipping out coupons or even shopping at retail stores. I see nothing wrong with it. Teens wont feel a recession until it gets alot worse though, because parents are still spoiling them a great deal.

Anonymous said...

I think that kids need to realize that the things you have in life and how much they are is not what it's all about. Peole can be just as happy not going out to buy the latest and greatest. It would be nice if teens thought about just being happy and please with what tehy do have rather than wanting to be the best.

reneesparza01 said...

I dont get everything i want! I dont ever really get anything! I work, go to school, and thats about it for a living! If i have time i go out on weekends and have fun with friends. But I work for just about everything i need! I have a truck, phone, and gas, that i pay for and not my parents!
It makes me mad when kids take advantage of their parents for money! Get a job and see how it is to earn a dollar! It takes work to put a 300 dollar shirt shirt or purse on that kid haha!

divyavangipuram1 said...

I especially liked reading everyone's comments on here. Everyone basically said, "Well other people do that, but me, I don't." I know for a fact that I enjoy that I don't work, the benefits of my parents' hard work, and the fact that I can enjoy having things that aren't so necessary. In fact, I know that almost all of my friends, to a certain extent, can say that. However, I think that I am learning to be more conscious of the receding economy. It is not something that has effected me personally, but I can see that it has taken a great toll on my parents, which indirectly has a lot to do with me. The recession has impacted my life as well as my parents' lives, and I feel like the less frugal that we can all be, the better it is. Now everyone has to live with a little voice in the back of their mind, telling them that buying something may not be such a good choice, whether it's your conscience, or your parents.

Michael Johnson 4 said...

This recession sucks, but it's nice to see the bright side of things, so if we could learn a lesson from it all, that would be great. Personally, I do think that it will teach us a lesson. We will start saving money for the things we really need and not lose all of our money from spending it on useless stuff. A lesson I have learned is to keep extra change from lunch at home. In a few months it will reach about $20-30. This extra change is my Christmas money.

Estevan Ramirez3 said...

This recession will finally force young shoppers to shop smart. This will be tough for some including myself i usually spend between 25-30 bucks on a shirt...but hey maybe it will help me to save money.

danielachavez4 said...

i would love to say that i'm one of those kids who uses their money wisely all the time, but i tend to blow a good amount of money, but the money i pretty much throw away is the money i earn from my job.
I do think buying a pair of jean that are 98 dollars is pretty stupid, but i have bought expensive jeans before. But just because i blow my money doesn't mean i don't love a good sale, because me and friends seem to buy alot of things when they are on sale. it's kinda nice when you buy a shirt for a few dollars because the next time you wear it & someone compliments you on it you say, "dude i got this for seven dollars at.." i have to say i really enjoy saying that. :]

danielachavez4 said...

i would love to say that i'm one of those kids who uses their money wisely all the time, but i tend to blow a good amount of money, but the money i pretty much throw away is the money i earn from my job.
I do think buying a pair of jean that are 98 dollars is pretty stupid, but i have bought expensive jeans before. But just because i blow my money doesn't mean i don't love a good sale, because me and friends seem to buy alot of things when they are on sale. it's kinda nice when you buy a shirt for a few dollars because the next time you wear it & someone compliments you on it you say, "dude i got this for seven dollars at.." i have to say i really enjoy saying that. :]

ericasanchez3 said...

I think that learning to spend your money wisely is a good thing to learn early in life. It makes a lot more sense to go to stores that are having sales and buy way more things than going to another store and buying only one or two things for the same amount. If you try to apply this style to your life now, it will certainly help you out later.

Anonymous said...

Well if it wasnt for some of the parents letting this go by it will be easy to stop. Our generation just needs to get hit by reality. Im really middle class so i really limit myself with the material things that i really dont need. But dont get me wrong, i do like to have the better things. That doesnt mean i get them.

amber obregon 2 said...

I think its better to shop cheap than to get expensive stuff because why buy just one shirt when you could of bought 2 or maybe even 3. Some people just dont know when to calm down on buying stuff for so much money..

mirandamartell7 said...

I like the idea of thrift store shopping. It saves you tons of money on a shirt that you could have spent $20 or even $30's on! That's crazy to spend all that hard earned money on 1 shirt, when you gen set like 3 shirts for the same price. Teens today need to know the value of a dollar and once you have it its gone just like that so yes i love thrift stores :] You get the shirt you wanted and more! But most teens now...lets put it this way if its not from the store the shirt says its from most likely there not gonna want to buy it cause now a days if it didn't cost a fortune that means your poor, if its $25 your rich. It goes either way but i see no problem with thrift stores its the same shirt but it didn't cost you a fortune.

ashleyledesma7 said...

This is a very good article!
It has a point and i agree
that it is a good idea, because
i mean money is money when you have
it you just want to buy everything.
Well most people are like that.
I think its good, because it'll help people be out of dept in the upcoming years. Plus a little bit of money saving wouldn't hurt anybody.