7 episodes

Australian millennials are the first generation to be worse off than their parents – and things are only heading in the same direction for Gen Z. Jane Lee and Matilda Boseley investigate “who screwed young Australians” and examine why inequality is rising in Australia

Who screwed millennials‪?‬ The Guardian

    • News
    • 4.7 • 35 Ratings

Australian millennials are the first generation to be worse off than their parents – and things are only heading in the same direction for Gen Z. Jane Lee and Matilda Boseley investigate “who screwed young Australians” and examine why inequality is rising in Australia

    Introducing: Who screwed millennials?

    Introducing: Who screwed millennials?

    Australian millennials are the first generation to be worse off than their parents, and things are only heading in the same direction for gen Z. In this deeply researched yet tongue-in-cheek five-part podcast series, Full Story co-host Jane Lee and social media reporter Matilda Boseley investigate the mystery of who screwed young Australians out of affordable housing, education and secure work, and why inequality is rising in Australia

    • 2 min
    Who screwed millennials: a generation left behind, part 1

    Who screwed millennials: a generation left behind, part 1

    With rising house prices, a decade of wage stagnation and ballooning student debt, young people in Australia are living through what author Jill Filipovic describes as ‘a series of broken promises’. In episode one of this new series from Guardian Australia, Full Story co-host Jane Lee and reporter Matilda Boseley sort through these broken promises, investigating why young people are living in a time of such economic strain. In this episode, we hear from a handful of experts featured in Who screwed millennials? – including author Jill Filipovic, youth researcher Intifar Chowdhury, author Malcolm Harris, Guardian Australia editor Lenore Taylor and former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis about how millennials became the first generation to be worse off than their parents

    • 20 min
    Who screwed millennials out of affordable housing? Part 2

    Who screwed millennials out of affordable housing? Part 2

    How did the government set fire to the Australian housing market? Jane Lee and Matilda Boseley look at how the threat of a communist uprising, a benign sounding tax review and one prime minister’s admiration for two world leaders changed the lives of young Australians

    • 51 min
    Who screwed millennials out of affordable education? Part 3

    Who screwed millennials out of affordable education? Part 3

    How did a system that was meant to make access to university more equitable end up burdening students with the very $100,000 degrees John Howard promised Australia would never have? Jane Lee and Matilda Boseley talk to the Labor-appointed architect of the higher education contribution scheme to understand why student fees were introduced, who benefited and how he wound up at a dinner party where guests were planning to burn an effigy … of him. In part three of Who screwed millennials? we hear from economist Prof Bruce Chapman, Guardian Australia editor Lenore Taylor, university historian Julia Horne, VicWise founder Manorani Guy and education reporter Caitlin Cassidy to trace the dozens of ideological changes over decades that transformed the nature of our university system

    • 47 min
    Who screwed millennials out of a secure job? Part 4

    Who screwed millennials out of a secure job? Part 4

    Why is the best way to get a pay rise to get a new job? Millennials have entered the workforce at a time when work is precarious: a third of Australia’s workforce are employed as casuals, freelancers or on short-term contracts. And wages have been heading south for the best part of a decade. But how did we get here? In this episode of Who Screwed Millennials? Jane Lee and Matilda Boseley talk to chief political correspondent Paul Karp, ACTU secretary Sally McManus, assistant national secretary of the MUA Thomas Mayo, former industrial relations consultant Paul Houlihan, labour history academic Geraldine Fela, ACTU president Michele O’Neil, former outworker Nguyet Nguyen and author Emma Do to examine the successive decisions over four decades that got us here

    • 1 hr
    Can millennials unscrew themselves? Part 5

    Can millennials unscrew themselves? Part 5

    There are no easy answers to undoing all the problems driving intergenerational inequality but hope is not lost. Young Australians are increasingly politically influential, making up 43% of voters at the last federal election. Jane Lee and Matilda Boseley call on Guardian Australia political reporter Amy Remeikis and the Australia Institute’s chief economist, Greg Jericho, to find out whether this is influencing policy debates on everything from housing to climate change, and how millennials can use their new-found power for good

    • 24 min

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5
35 Ratings

35 Ratings

Freckelton10 ,

Great series

This series combined modern history, economics, politics to help explain why Australia is how it is today. Fantastic.

Jaspy08 ,

Very informative

Really enjoyed it. Interesting to see why things are the way they are now.

listener in perth ,

Over simplified and sounds more like a whine than an a logically argued view

Cannot get into the data in a short comment. Take housing. Go back to say late 1980’s. Compare the following to say 2020 in Perth. Why 2020 not today? Covid had done something to spike house prices, that really is odd, but that’s not what this podcast is about.

Work out the average price of a house at both times
Work out average gross wage at both times
Work out income tax rates at both times
Work out interest rate at both times
Work out the average price of a new car at both times.

Do the math and you will find a young couple in the 1980’s was not looking at a dirt cheap housing market. What made boomers asset rich was what happened after they bought. For many it looked pretty grim when the 1991 recession hit. There were suicides and broken homes. Boomers had no idea things would improve the way they eventually did.

Top Podcasts In News

The Rest Is Politics
Goalhanger Podcasts
If You're Listening
ABC listen
Not Stupid
ABC Listen
ABC News Daily
ABC
The Daily
The New York Times
Full Story
The Guardian

You Might Also Like

Expanse
ABC listen
Full Story
The Guardian
7am
Schwartz Media
The Briefing
LiSTNR
Conversations
ABC listen
Background Briefing
ABC listen