Young Americans are being pushed into high-risk digital assets not because they believe in technological possibilities, but simply from financial distress. According to a new study conducted by researchers Seung Hyeong Lee and Younggeun Yoo, the growing inability to find affordable housing for young Americans is creating a phenomenon referred to as “financial nihilism” in which they view crypto as their only way out of a lifetime of renting.
The report, published on November 19, suggests that for many Americans born in the 1990s, the traditional path of “work hard, save money, buy a house” has completely broken down. In its place, a high-stakes casino mentality has taken root.
The Math of Despair
The widening gap between wage and property value increases, which is creating a significant issue. The study shows that the median price to income ratio of a single U.S. House increased rapidly from 1984 to 2022. This means that the average worker needs almost two full years of additional income to be able to purchase the same house that their parents purchased years ago. To many workers, the new timeline of needing two more years of full time income to purchase a house breaks the psychological contract of being an employee. When the finish line keeps moving further away, the motivation to run the marathon evaporates. The researchers found that once renters conclude homeownership is mathematically impossible, their financial behavior changes immediately and permanently. They stop saving for a down payment that will never be enough and pivot toward assets that offer “transformative upside.”
Quiet Quitting the Economy
Recognition of this fact creates an enormous change in behavior that goes beyond their choice of where to invest their money. This research provides a demographic profile of the “discouraged renters” who have basically removed themselves from the conventional economic system. Disappointed renters are nearly twice as likely to respond positively to the statement “Working hard doesn’t matter, I can get by without it,” a perspective that has come to be known in the workplace as “quiet quitting.”
Furthermore, with the goal of a mortgage off the table, spending habits become more immediate and hedonistic. Discouraged renters were found to spend roughly 10% more on credit cards than homeowners with identical net worths. The overall idea is quite simple; if someone cannot obtain a $100K deposit to buy property – then they might as well enjoy their current $1K.
The Jackpot Strategy
The jackpot strategy is to induce individuals to invest in crypto, as the researchers suggest that crypto should be viewed as a “last resort” or the potential replacement of the American dream. The study found that crypto participation is most pronounced among renters with a net worth between $50,000 and $300,000. These individuals are too wealthy to rely solely on safety nets but too poor to enter the housing market.
“When the probability of ever buying a home collapses, households shift toward high-variance assets,” Lee and Yoo write. In this context, Bitcoin and altcoins aren’t just investments; they are lottery tickets. The mindset shifts from slow, steady compounding to a “moonshot” approach. If the bet pays off, they leapfrog the broken system. If it fails, they are simply back where they started—renting forever.
A Global Phenomenon of Resignation
Economic resignation also has developed in regions of the world that are beyond North America. An example would be the effects of youth culture in Asia due to high increases in urban property values and a lack of housing available.
In South Korea, this demographic is known as the “Sampo generation”—those who have given up on three major life milestones: dating, marriage, and childbirth—because the cost of establishing a family home is insurmountable. Similarly, Japan has seen the rise of the “Satori” generation. These young people are described as “enlightened” or detached from material ambition, having accepted that the career-and-home trajectory of the post-war boom is no longer attainable for them.
The Permanent Wealth Divide
The long-term consequences of this shift are severe. The study projects that the cohort born in the 1990s will reach retirement with a homeownership rate 9.6 percentage points lower than their parents. This creates a permanent wealth trap. While “hopeful” renters continue to save and eventually compound wealth through equity, discouraged renters drift further into a cycle of high consumption and high-risk betting.
As more homes are taken off the market and sold to investors and developers, it creates a growing divide between people with wealth who own property and those who do not and this divide will most likely continue to widen for the foreseeable future thus impacting the overall economy for many years to come.

