More than 84% of Americans aged 18-24 rate the US economy as bad or terrible, a fresh Generation Lab survey shows, with President Trump and corporate greed sharing most of the blame.
The findings land as Trump’s second term continues to push pro-crypto policy, suggesting economic gloom among Gen Z and younger millennials has not eased despite a friendlier digital asset agenda.
Generation Lab surveyed 1,002 Americans aged 18-34 between April 26 and April 29. Among all respondents, 52% rated the economy as bad, and 29% rated it terrible. Just 16% picked good, and only 2% chose excellent.
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The pattern holds across age brackets. About 84% of 18-24-year-olds rated conditions as bad or terrible. The 25-29 group landed at 81%, while the 30-34s came in at 73%.
Sentiment runs sharper among women, non-binary, and other respondents. Roughly 90% of female respondents chose ‘bad’ or ‘terrible,’ compared with 73% of male respondents.
Meanwhile, among respondents who viewed the economy negatively, responsibility was most often assigned to the President. Overall, 41% attributed poor economic conditions to him.
Within the 18–24 age group, 42% placed the blame on Trump, while 32% cited corporate greed. Among those aged 25–29, opinion was evenly divided, with 33% pointing to Trump and an equal share blaming corporate actors.
The oldest cohort is the harshest. 48% of 30-34-year-olds pin responsibility on Trump, the highest share among any age group surveyed. Just 2% blame former President Biden.
Generation Lab noted that results carry a ±3.1 percentage-point margin of error, with wider margins for subgroup analyses.
The findings stand out given Trump’s loud support for digital assets since returning to office. His administration backed a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and signed the GENIUS Act, which regulates stablecoins.
Still, headline pressure remains intense. March inflation rose to 3.3%, while gas prices have surged past $4.45 per gallon since the US-Israel war with Iran began.
Concerns about a potential food shortage and the risk of a recession are also weighing on Americans. Notably, 77% of survey respondents said the United States made the wrong decision in taking military action against Iran.
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