Generation X

demographic group
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Also known as: Gen X, MTV Generation, baby bust generation
Also called:
Gen X, baby bust generation, or MTV Generation
Top Questions

What is Generation X?

What is Generation X known for?

How did Generation X get its name?

Generation X, a term typically used to describe the generation of Americans born between 1965 and 1980, although some sources use slightly different ranges. It has sometimes been called the “middle child” generation, as it follows the well-known baby boomer generation and precedes the millennial generation (Generation Y, meaning those born between 1981–96). Generation X also has been called the “baby bust” generation, because its members were born when the high birth rates of the baby boomer decades declined (attributed in part to the introduction of the birth control pill, which first went on the market in the early 1960s). It has fewer members than the baby boomer generation that precedes it and the Gen Y and Gen Z (meaning those born during the late 1990s and early 2000s) generations that follow it. This is one of the reasons that Generation X is considered to be forgotten or overlooked when generations are discussed.

The Gen X experience

Members of Generation X, or Gen Xers, grew up in a time when there were more dual-income families, single-parent households, and children of divorce than when boomers were growing up. Consequently, many Gen Xers were latchkey kids, returning from school to an empty home while their parents were still away at work. Gen Xers were the first generation to grow up with personal computers to some extent, thus becoming tech savvy. They were the first generation to grow up with cable television widely available. MTV, the cable television network that initially broadcast music videos 24 hours a day, was rolled out in 1981 and was embraced by so many Gen Xers that MTV Generation also has been used to describe the Generation X cohort.

Gen Xers came of age during the emergence of the deadly AIDS epidemic in the 1980s, which gave a new urgency to the notion of “safe sex” practices. They saw a changing world order, having lived through the end of the Cold War with the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. They witnessed the technological marvel of the first successful space shuttle flight in 1981 as well as the tragic explosion of the space shuttle Challenger five years later. Gen Xers lived during the height of the U.S. government’s War on Drugs, being exhorted to “just say no” to illegal drug use. They also lived through the energy crises in the 1970s and ’80s.

Gen Xers experienced shaky economic times as children and young adults, enduring the recessions of the 1970s, ’80s, and ’90s, and would continue to be impacted by economic tumult throughout their adult lives. College tuition rates began to soar in the early 1980s, saddling Generation X with more student loan debt than previous generations, which would take its members many years—for some, decades—to pay off. Some entered the workforce during or after a recession. Subsequently, many Gen Xers were unemployed, or underemployed, and the number of Gen Xers who as adults had to move back home to live with their parents gave rise to the “boomerang kids” moniker. (These trends would continue and accelerate with the millennial generation.) Partly because of these factors, Gen Xers were sometimes described as slackers or whiners, particularly in the 1990s, although those descriptions have been contested. In the following decades, the economic fallout from the Great Recession (2007–09) and the COVID-19 pandemic would affect all living generations, but Gen Xers saw a more significant setback to their retirement funds than others. On the whole, Generation X was likely to be the first generation whose members would not be more financially well-off than their parents were.

Characteristics of Gen Xers

Gen Xers are typically described as being resourceful and independent—traits partly stemming from their latchkey childhoods—as well as keen on maintaining work-life balance, perhaps due to witnessing the demands of their parents’ work and subsequent absence from family life. They are often described as being cynical, attributed to the economic and societal tumult they experienced as children and young adults.

As compared with previous generations, members of Generation X are more ethnically diverse, with some one-third of Gen Xers identifying as nonwhite; are somewhat less likely to be involved in organized religion; and tend to be more liberal on social issues, such as same-sex marriage. However, this open-mindedness did not necessarily translate into a more traditionally liberal political identification: a 2022 Gallup poll showed that 27 percent of Gen Xers identified as Democrats, while 30 percent identified as Republicans. More Gen Xers—44 percent—chose to identify as independent, which was a higher percentage than in previous generations.

Cultural impact

One of the defining characteristics of the Gen X scene in the late 1980s and ’90s was grunge music, personified by bands including Nirvana and Pearl Jam. Other genres of music on which Gen Xers left their mark were rap and hip-hop, with prominent artists such as De La Soul, Tupac Shakur, and Jay-Z. Many Gen X entertainers seamlessly moved between music, television, and film work, including Queen Latifah, Jennifer Lopez, and Will Smith.

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Origin of the term

The use of the term Generation X to describe this generational cohort was popularized by Douglas Coupland, a Canadian journalist and novelist. An article that he wrote in 1987 for Vancouver Magazine used the term. He later said that he had taken it from a book—Class: A Guide Through the American Status System (1983) by Paul Fussell—that used X to refer to a group of people who did not wish to concern themselves with societal pressures, money, and status. The term was further popularized by Coupland’s 1991 novel, Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture.

Amy McKenna