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Give Gen-Z what our grandparents had, and they'll jump at the chance.

This is what it should look like:

* A lifetime job with inflation adjusted income. Work around the tax code by providing a company vehicle or whatever. Wages don't need to be that high, just decent. Gen-Z isn't trying to accumulate stacks of cash.
* No college or trade schools. Just train them in the job. Keep retraining them as the industry changes and technology advances.
* Stay-at-home moms! If both parents have to work, it's not worth it.
* Decent working hours. 40 hours a week max. If work is slow, cut hours back (but not salary of course.) Let them work 4 10s or whatever so they can spend time with their kids. Or let them spend time working on side-projects for the company. Maybe work overtime from time to time, but it better be compensated and rare. Maybe 2 weeks overtime in a year.
* Live near the job with minimal commute. Or better yet, telecommute. They know that driving into downtown city USA is pointless. There's no reason to have your company located there.
* Get a house on less than one year's wages. No mortgage. They don't need a million square feet. A 3 bedroom house with decent sized bedrooms so you can put in bunk beds is sufficient. A nice living room with a kitchen so the family spends their time together. Ultimately, most of the free time Gen-Z will spend is going to be on the computer anyway.
* Some way to accumulate real wealth over time. By the time the Gen-Z employee retires, he wants something he can pass to his kids. He doesn't mind living with a little less than his parents and grandparents in retirement, but he doesn't want to jeopardize his kid's future either.

It really isn't too much to ask. Gen-Z isn't interested in money and pointless expressions of wealth, again. They are looking for quality of life and immaterial things that money can't buy. They want to build family and community. They don't want to sacrifice everything for a company only to be kicked to the curb.

If they could trust the company to be loyal to them, they just might be loyal to the company.
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Jarilo on scored.co
1 year ago 6 points (+0 / -0 / +6Score on mirror ) 1 child
If you mention standard European social benefits like 5 weeks of paid vacation per year or the long maternity leave, then American boomers immediately scream "communism".

Ironically, commies were very good at providing housing to everybody. Just look at the home ownership rate in ex-commie countries - that is the result of government policies during the reign of Communist parties. Of course, this is how you get the depressing commie block jungles...

That being said, 20th century commie engineers have figured out things that seem to be too difficult in some western countries, like double-pane windows (for some reason, Canada and the US still have a lot of buildings with crappy single pane windows), or how to mix hot and cold water so that it results in a pleasant temperature (the UK still hasn't fully figured this out), or how to heat the homes so that you don't have to wear a coat indoors (a big problem in parts of Germany, Canada and the US, for some reason)
systemthrowaway on scored.co
1 year ago 4 points (+0 / -0 / +4Score on mirror ) 1 child
>Of course, this is how you get the depressing commie block jungles...

Unfortunately here in America modern housing developments look even worse and even the workmanship is probably inferior.
hkdlxohk on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
And then there's Toronto and Vancouver, where you can get in a condo worse than a commie block apartment, but pay $2 million for it.
systemthrowaway on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
At least shitty condos are compact. I loath housing developments because they spread out over valuable land.
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