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Study reveals Australia no longer the ‘lucky country’ for millennials

Australians born after 1982 are less optimistic about the future, a research result based on the 2017 Deloitte Millenial Survey

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Only 8 per cent of millennials in Australia believe they will be better off than their parents. Photo: Sydney Morning Herald

By Anna Patty

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Millennials in Australia no longer consider it the “lucky country” and are less optimistic about the future than their counterparts in developing economies including the Philippines, Indonesia and India.

The international study also reveals Australians born after 1982 are more prepared to leave their jobs after two years than they have been in previous surveys.

The 2017 Deloitte Millennial Survey is based on the views of 8000 people born after 1982 across 30 countries, including 300 in Australia.

Only 8 per cent of millennials in Australia believe they will be better off than their parents and only 4 per cent believe they will be happier.

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That compares with greater optimism in markets including Europe and the US where 36 per cent of respondents predicted they would be financially better off than their parents.

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