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Dave Ramsey Says Gen Z And Millennials Are Getting Exploited By Debt Traps, Not Lazy

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Financial guru Dave Ramsey is pushing back on stereotypes about younger generations, arguing their financial struggles stem from systemic debt exploitation rather than character flaws or economic forces beyond their control.

Financial expert Dave Ramsey is taking a surprisingly sympathetic stance on why younger Americans are struggling financially. The problem isn't inflation, housing costs, or avocado toast, he says. It's that financial institutions have systematically exploited Gen Z and millennials into debt traps that make building wealth nearly impossible.

The Most Motivated Generations, Just Broke

On Thursday, the Ramsey Solutions founder pushed back hard against the lazy millennial stereotype. He called Gen Z and millennials "the easiest generations to lead" and praised their authenticity and drive.

"When they believe in a mission, they will charge the gates of hell with a water pistol," he said, crediting their abundance mentality to growing up with smartphones and unlimited information access.

Big Banks Created The Problem

But here's the catch: all that drive doesn't matter much when your paycheck disappears before you even see it. Ramsey argues that financial institutions have convinced young people that debt is just part of modern life.

"Big Banks have thoroughly convinced Gen Z and millennials that credit card debt is part of life and good for your FICO score," he wrote, pointing to record consumer debt levels eating up disposable income.

Car companies aren't innocent either. Ramsey criticized the push toward expensive leases that keep monthly payments high indefinitely. And student loans? He called them an "epic failure" that saddles 18-year-olds with debt burdens before they've even started earning.

The Way Out Exists

Ramsey's prescription is straightforward: take control. Eliminate unnecessary debt. Choose reliable used cars over shiny leases. Start a side hustle. Attack those student loans aggressively.

"Your economic issues are not proof the American Dream is dead," he wrote.

He knows something about financial comebacks. Ramsey became a millionaire by 26, then lost it all and declared bankruptcy. That experience taught him to learn from people with proven wealth-building track records, not from what he calls "broke people" who give advice out of fear you'll outpace them.

When a 25-year-old asked about investing a $200,000 inheritance, Ramsey's advice was simple: prioritize disciplined money management over risky bets. Lasting wealth comes from smart habits and character, not windfalls or shortcuts.

His message to younger generations is clear: you're not the problem. The system designed to profit from your debt is the problem. But you can still win.

Dave Ramsey Says Gen Z And Millennials Are Getting Exploited By Debt Traps, Not Lazy

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Financial guru Dave Ramsey is pushing back on stereotypes about younger generations, arguing their financial struggles stem from systemic debt exploitation rather than character flaws or economic forces beyond their control.

Financial expert Dave Ramsey is taking a surprisingly sympathetic stance on why younger Americans are struggling financially. The problem isn't inflation, housing costs, or avocado toast, he says. It's that financial institutions have systematically exploited Gen Z and millennials into debt traps that make building wealth nearly impossible.

The Most Motivated Generations, Just Broke

On Thursday, the Ramsey Solutions founder pushed back hard against the lazy millennial stereotype. He called Gen Z and millennials "the easiest generations to lead" and praised their authenticity and drive.

"When they believe in a mission, they will charge the gates of hell with a water pistol," he said, crediting their abundance mentality to growing up with smartphones and unlimited information access.

Big Banks Created The Problem

But here's the catch: all that drive doesn't matter much when your paycheck disappears before you even see it. Ramsey argues that financial institutions have convinced young people that debt is just part of modern life.

"Big Banks have thoroughly convinced Gen Z and millennials that credit card debt is part of life and good for your FICO score," he wrote, pointing to record consumer debt levels eating up disposable income.

Car companies aren't innocent either. Ramsey criticized the push toward expensive leases that keep monthly payments high indefinitely. And student loans? He called them an "epic failure" that saddles 18-year-olds with debt burdens before they've even started earning.

The Way Out Exists

Ramsey's prescription is straightforward: take control. Eliminate unnecessary debt. Choose reliable used cars over shiny leases. Start a side hustle. Attack those student loans aggressively.

"Your economic issues are not proof the American Dream is dead," he wrote.

He knows something about financial comebacks. Ramsey became a millionaire by 26, then lost it all and declared bankruptcy. That experience taught him to learn from people with proven wealth-building track records, not from what he calls "broke people" who give advice out of fear you'll outpace them.

When a 25-year-old asked about investing a $200,000 inheritance, Ramsey's advice was simple: prioritize disciplined money management over risky bets. Lasting wealth comes from smart habits and character, not windfalls or shortcuts.

His message to younger generations is clear: you're not the problem. The system designed to profit from your debt is the problem. But you can still win.