Main generations • The
Lost Generation, also known as the "Generation of 1914" in Europe, is a term originating from
Gertrude Stein to describe those who fought in
World War I. The Lost Generation is defined as the cohort born from 1883 to 1900 who came of age during World War I and the
Roaring Twenties. • The
Greatest Generation, also known in American usage as the "G.I. Generation", includes the
veterans who fought in
World War II. They were born from 1901 to 1927; older G.I.s (or the
Interbellum Generation) came of age during the Roaring Twenties, while younger G.I.s came of age during the
Great Depression and World War II. Journalist
Tom Brokaw wrote about American members of this cohort in his book
The Greatest Generation, which popularized the term. • The
Silent Generation, also known as the "Lucky Few", is the cohort who came of age in the
post–World War II era. They were born from 1928 to 1945. In the U.S., this group includes most of those who may have fought in the
Korean War and many of those who may have fought during the
Vietnam War. •
Baby boomers (often shortened to Boomers) are the people born following World War II from 1946 to 1964. Increased birth rates were observed during the
post–World War II baby boom, making them a relatively large demographic cohort. In the U.S., many older boomers may have fought in the
Vietnam War or participated in the
counterculture of the 1960s, while younger boomers (or
Generation Jones) came of age in the "malaise" years of the 1970s. •
Generation X (or Gen X for short) is the cohort following the baby boomers. The generation is generally defined as people born between 1965 and 1980. In the U.S., Xers were sometimes called the "baby bust" generation because of a drop in birth rates following the baby boom. They were also referred to as the
MTV Generation, due to the channel's popularity among this cohort. •
Millennials, also known as Generation Y (or Gen Y for short), are the generation following Generation X, who grew up around the
turn of the 3rd millennium. The generation is typically defined as people born from 1981 to 1996. In 2019, millennials outnumbered baby boomers in the United States, amounting to an estimated 71.6 million boomers and 72.1 million millennials. •
Generation Z (or Gen Z for short and colloquially as "Zoomers") are the people succeeding the Millennials. This cohort is generally defined as those born from 1997 to 2012. •
Generation Alpha (or Gen Alpha for short) is the generation succeeding Generation Z. Researchers and popular media loosely identify the early 2010s as the starting birth years and the 2020s as the ending birth years, with there not being a true consensus on the exact birth range yet. Generation Alpha is the first to be born entirely in the 21st century. Generation Alpha is named after the first letter of the
Greek alphabet.
Others • In
Armenia, people born after the country's independence from the
Soviet Union in 1991 are known as the "Independence generation". • In the
Czech Republic and
Slovakia, the generation of people born in
Czechoslovakia during the
baby boom which started in the early 1970s, during the period of "
normalization" are called "
Husák's children". The generation was named after the President and long-term
Communist leader of Czechoslovakia,
Gustáv Husák. This was due to his political program to boost the growth of population. • In the
People's Republic of China, the "
Post-80s" (Chinese: 八零后世代 or 八零后) (born-after-1980 generation) are those who were born in the 1980s in urban areas of mainland China. Growing up in modern China, the Post-80s has been characterised by its optimism for the future, newfound excitement for
consumerism and
entrepreneurship and acceptance of its historic role in transforming modern China into an
economic power. There is also the similarly named "
Post-90s" (Chinese: 九零后), those born after 1990. A broader generational classification would be the "one-child generation" born between the introduction of the
one-child policy in 1979 and its softening into a "
two-child policy" in 2015. The lack of siblings has had profound psychological effects on this generation, such as
egoism due to always being at the centre of parents' attention as well as the stress of having to be the sole provider once the parents retire. • People born post-1980s in
Hong Kong are for the most part different from the same generation in mainland China. The term "
Post-80s" (zh:
八十後) came into use in
Hong Kong between 2009 and 2010, particularly during the
opposition to the Guangzhou-Hong Kong Express Rail Link, during which a group of young activists came to the forefront of Hong Kong's political scene. They are said to be "
post-materialist" in outlook, and they are particularly vocal in issues such as urban development, culture and heritage, and political reform. Their campaigns include the fight for the preservation of
Lee Tung Street, the Star Ferry Pier and the Queen's Pier, Choi Yuen Tsuen Village, real political reform (on 23 June), and a citizen-oriented Kowloon West Art district. Their discourse mainly develops around themes such as
anti-colonialism,
sustainable development, and democracy. • In
Hungary, the re-criminalization of abortion and the childless-tax policies implemented by
Anna Ratkó in the early-1950s resulted in a minor baby boom (roughly 1953–1956) known as the "Ratkó era" (
:hu:Ratkó-korszak) or the "Ratkó children." • In
India, generations tend to follow a pattern similar to the broad Western model, although there are still major differences, especially in the older generations. One interpretation sees
India's independence in 1947 as India's major generational shift. People born in the 1930s and 1940s tended to be loyal to the new state and tended to adhere to "traditional" divisions of society. Indian "boomers", those born after independence and into the early 1960s, witnessed events like the
Indian Emergency between 1975 and 1977 which made a number of them somewhat skeptical of the government. • In
Israel, where most
Ashkenazi Jews born before the end of
World War II were
Holocaust survivors, children of survivors and people who survived as babies are sometimes referred to as the "second generation (of Holocaust survivors)" (Hebrew: דור שני לניצולי שואה,
dor sheni lenitsolei shoah; or more often just דור שני לשואה,
dor sheni lashoah, literally "second generation to the Holocaust"). This term is particularly common in the context of psychological, social, and political implications of the individual and national
transgenerational trauma caused by
the Holocaust. Some researchers have also found signs of trauma in third-generation Holocaust survivors. • In
Northern Ireland, people born after the signing of the
Good Friday Agreement in 1998, generally regarded as the end of
the Troubles, are colloquially known as "Peace Babies". • In
Norway, the term "the dessert generation" has been applied to the baby boomers and every generation afterwards. • In
Poland term
generation of Columbuses means Poles who were born soon after Poland regained its independence in 1918, and whose adolescence was marked by World War II. • In
Romania, the term decreței (from the Romanian language word decret, meaning "decree"; diminutive decrețel) is used to refer to those Romanians born during the period immediately following
Decree 770 signed in 1967, which restricted abortion and contraception, and was intended to create a new and large Romanian population. • In
Russia, characteristics of Russian generations are determined by fateful historical events that significantly change either the foundations of the life of the country as a whole or the rules of life in a certain period of time. Names and given descriptions of Russian generations: the Generation of Winners, the generation of the
Cold War, the generation of
Perestroika, the first non-Soviet generation (the children of Perestroika, the Witnesses of Perestroika), the digital generation. • In
Singapore, people born before 1949 are referred to as the "
Pioneer Generation" for their contributions to Singapore during the nation's earliest years. Likewise, those born between 1950 and 1959 are referred to as the "
Merdeka Generation" as their formative years were during the
political turbulence of the 1950s to 1960s in Singapore. • In
South Africa, people born after the
1994 general election, the first after
apartheid was ended, are often referred to in media as the "born-free generation". People born after the year 2000 are often referred to as "Ama2000", a term popularized by music and a
Coca-Cola advert. • In
South Korea, generational cohorts are often defined around the democratization of the country, with various schemes suggested including names such as the "democratization generation",
386 generation (named after
Intel 386 computer in the 1990s to describe people in their late 30s and early 40s who were born in the 1960s, and attended university/college in the 1980s, also called the "June 3, 1987 generation"), that witnessed the June uprising, the "April 19 generation" (that struggled against the
Syngman Rhee regime in 1960), the "June 3 generation" (that struggled against the normalization treaty with Japan in 1964), the "1969 generation" (that struggled against the constitutional revision allowing three presidential terms), and the
shin-se-dae ("new") generation. The term
Shin-se-dae generation refers to the generation following Millennials in the Korean language. The
Shin-se-dae generation are mostly free from ideological or political bias. • In
Spain, although in general terms there is a certain assimilation to the generational structure of Strauss and Howe (and uncritically the majority of the media use it), there are substantial differentials, for historical reasons that (as established by the Generations theory) have marked the successive age cohorts in the 20th Century. Firstly, neutrality during the First World War, which prevented it from suffering that social and cultural impact. Secondly, the Civil War and the subsequent dictatorship, which lasted four decades and, especially during its first decades, imposed strong political, social and cultural repression. And thirdly, neutrality during World War II. Thus, the sociologists
Artemio Baigorri and
Manuela Caballero insert, between the Silent Generation and the Baby Boom Generation (which they also call the Protest Generation), what they call the Franco Generation (1929–1943), whose childhood and early youth was marked by war, post-war scarcity and repression. • In
Taiwan, the term
Strawberry generation refers to Taiwanese people born after 1981 who "bruise easily" like strawberries—meaning they can not withstand social pressure or work hard like their parents' generation; the term refers to people who are insubordinate, spoiled, selfish, arrogant, and sluggish in work. • In the
Philippines, the Filipinos who are in
Millennials is also known as ''Batang 90's''. • In
Ukraine, the political scientists
Olga Onuch and
Henry E. Hale identified people born from about 1975 to 1985 as the "Independence Generation" in their book
The Zelensky Effect. This generation were children when Ukraine gained independence in 1991—old enough to recall and understand, but too young to participate—and "came of age politically in an independent Ukraine". Onuch and Hale argue that this generation has played a vital role in the formation of
civic national identity in Ukraine.
Other terminology The term generation is sometimes applied to a cultural movement, or more narrowly defined group than an entire demographic (such as
cuspers between generations). Some examples include: • The
Stolen Generations, refers to children of
Aboriginal Australians and
Torres Strait Islander descent, who were forcibly removed from their families by Australian federal and state government agencies and church missions, under Acts of their respective parliaments between approximately 1869 and 1969. • The
Beat Generation, refers to a popular American cultural movement widely cited by social scholars as having laid the foundation of the pro-active American counterculture of the 1960s. It consisted of Americans born between the two world wars who came of age in the rise of the automobile era, and the surrounding accessibility they brought to the culturally diverse, yet geographically broad and separated nation. •
Generation Jones is a term coined by
Jonathan Pontell to describe the
cohort of people born between 1954 and 1965. The term is used primarily in
English-speaking countries. Pontell defined Generation Jones as referring to the second half of the
post–World War II baby boom. The term also includes first-wave
Generation X. •
MTV Generation, a term referring to the adolescents and young adults of the 1980s and early-mid 1990s who were heavily influenced by the television channel
MTV. It is often used synonymously with
Generation X. • In Europe, a variety of terms have emerged in different countries particularly after the
2008 financial crisis to designate young people with limited employment and career prospects. •
The Generation of 500 is a term popularized by the
Greek mass media and refers to educated
Greek twixters of urban centers who generally fail to establish a
career. Young adults are usually forced into
underemployment in temporary and occasional jobs, unrelated to their educational background, and receive the minimum allowable base
salary of €500. This generation evolved in circumstances leading to the
Greek debt crisis and participated in the
2010–2011 Greek protests. • In Spain, they are referred to as the
mileuristas (for €1,000, "the thousand-euro-ists"). • In Portugal, they are called the
Geração à Rasca (the "Scraping-By Generation"); a twist on the older term
Geração Rasca ("the Lousy Generation") used by detractors to refer to student demonstrations in the 1990s against Education Ministers
António Couto dos Santos and later
Manuela Ferreira Leite. • In France, they are called
Génération précaire ("The Precarious Generation"). • In Italy the term "generation of 1,000 euros" is used. •
Xennials, Oregon Trail Generation, and Generation Catalano are terms used to describe individuals born during Generation X/Millennial
cusp years.
Xennials is a portmanteau blending the words Generation X and Millennials to describe a microgeneration of people born from the late 1970s to the early 1980s. •
Zillennials, Zennials, Snapchat Generation, and MinionZ are terms used to describe individuals born during the Millennial/Generation Z
cusp years.
Zillennials is a portmanteau blending the words Millennials and Generation Z to describe a microgeneration of people born from the mid- to late-1990s. • In the Netherlands the term
Pechgeneratie ("Bad luck generation") describes students who started their higher education between the years of 2015 and 2022. In those years, the Dutch government had replaced the basic grant (basisbeurs) system with a loan system in which students had to take on debt to pay for their studies. ==Criticism==