I think GenX gets largely absorbed into millennials and boomers when people make generalizations. The birth year cutoff for millenial has crept increasingly downward, subsuming what I remember as GenY, and I think for marketing purposes, a childless 47 year old renter would probably be lumped in with millennials while a 51 year old with a kid in university would be called a boomer.
Not that I agree with it.
clipsy · 22h ago
> The birth year cutoff for millenial has crept increasingly downward, subsuming what I remember as GenY
The term "millennials" was coined before "Generation Y," and the initial definition was children born during or after 1982, which is more or less where it stands now (I've seen the definition of millennials get extended back to 1980, but rarely if ever into the 70's.) Generation X is actually the one that absorbed the originally defined Generation Y, which comprised children born from 1974-1980.
Likewise, baby boomers were born between 1946 and 1964. They are called boomers because they were born in the baby boom that occurred after WWII.
So a 51 year old is most definitely Gen X and not a Boomer. No matter what. Kids born in the mid-70's (50+) are quite outside by more than a decade of the baby boom period.
Source: My parents are definitely boomers, and I am definitely GenX. I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to learn what the X meant. It was significant in the same way "boomer" was. Anyone trying to change or extend the meanings needs a history lesson.
Baby Boomers, GenX and Millenials all have meanings of significance to their titles, whereas Y, Z and the super weird "alpha" are just keeping up a pattern that loses the meanings of the other generations that got meaningful names.
Not that I agree with it.
The term "millennials" was coined before "Generation Y," and the initial definition was children born during or after 1982, which is more or less where it stands now (I've seen the definition of millennials get extended back to 1980, but rarely if ever into the 70's.) Generation X is actually the one that absorbed the originally defined Generation Y, which comprised children born from 1974-1980.
Citation: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennials#Terminology_and_et...
So a 51 year old is most definitely Gen X and not a Boomer. No matter what. Kids born in the mid-70's (50+) are quite outside by more than a decade of the baby boom period.
Source: My parents are definitely boomers, and I am definitely GenX. I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to learn what the X meant. It was significant in the same way "boomer" was. Anyone trying to change or extend the meanings needs a history lesson.
Baby Boomers, GenX and Millenials all have meanings of significance to their titles, whereas Y, Z and the super weird "alpha" are just keeping up a pattern that loses the meanings of the other generations that got meaningful names.