Young Hispanic adults appear to be a bit more upbeat about their financial outlook, according to polling. When the Harvard Institute of Politics surveyed 18- to 29-year-olds in March 2019, about two-thirds of Hispanic respondents rated their financial situation either “fairly good” (56%) or “very good” (12%). Just 8% called their outlook “very bad,” while 21% rated it “fairly bad.” Along the same lines, February 2019 polling by GenForward found 18% of Hispanics ages 18 to 34 “very optimistic” and 33% “somewhat optimistic” about their financial future. Just 23% were pessimistic, including 7% as “very” pessimistic.
While many Hispanics have misgivings about their current finances, that sentiment coexists with satisfaction about the trajectory. This latter element was evident in the Fed’s “Well-Being” survey when it asked respondents whether they are better off financially than their parents were at the same age. Across levels of education, Hispanic respondents were more than twice as likely to say “better off” than “worse off.” The gap was widest among those with a bachelor’s degree or more, with 61% picking “better” and 19% “worse.”
This sense of upward mobility is especially strong among Hispanic young adults. The Harvard Institute of Politics polling asked 18- to 29-year-olds whether they expected to be better off, about the same, or worse off financially than their parents are now when they reach that age. Hispanics were about four times more likely to say “better off” than “worse off,” at 42% vs. 10%.
In looking at millennial research from his firm, Mario X. Carrasco, co-founder and principal of ThinkNow Research, has seen this optimism among young Hispanics. “We looked at key markers of the American dream: home ownership, education, kids. Across the board, Hispanics still believe in those traditional markers, and they’re really the last leg holding up this dying 'idea' of the American dream. Hispanics are still driving that for this country.”
Jose Villa, president of marketing agency Sensis, noted that this belief is strongest among immigrants—people who “came to this country for a better life”—and their kids. “We do see that the closer they are to being immigrants, the more optimistic and the stronger their belief in the American dream is,” he said. “As you become more acculturated, you become a little less optimistic and positive.”