Gen Z Americans are losing faith in the economy one meme at a time
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Young Americans aren’t reading economic forecasts. They’re watching memes, nail tutorials, Klarna food orders, and falling Depop prices—and from what they see, the economy is in a precarious state. As of March 2025, Gen Z isn’t laughing with Wall Street.
They’re joking about the end times on TikTok and Instagram while scanning the internet for budget press-ons and ways to stay afloat. And they’re not imagining it. The numbers are turning, the data’s slipping and the jokes are just masks.
According to CNBC, Gen Z is tracking the economy through the weirdest possible signs. Skin care brands selling eggs. An avalanche of online college ads. The drop in fake eyelash quality. Lady Gaga albums.
And now Klarna, a buy-now-pay-later service, is letting people finance their damn lunch through DoorDash. Klarna’s own spokesperson told NBC News that this is “a bad indicator for society.”
Memes predict the worst before economists do
Sydney Brams, a 26-year-old Miami-based realtor and influencer, saw the shift coming through Depop. She told CNBC that when sellers on the clothing resale app started lowering their prices, she panicked. “I was literally running to my parents and my boyfriend, and I’m like, ‘Look at this. Look, something is very wrong,’” Sydney said. “I feel like Chicken Little.”
Sydney’s not the only one clocking the crash through resale markets. On TikTok, creators like Celeste in DC are pushing recession hacks in between memes. “We are heading into a recession. You need to learn how to do your nails at home,” Celeste said in one video. She taught her followers how to use press-on nails instead of dropping cash at the salon.
On platforms like X, TikTok, and Instagram, Gen Z isn’t looking for comfort. They’re watching the weirdest cultural signals and posting memes to match. If Lady Gaga drops an album, they assume a crash is near.
If people start learning the harmonica, it’s another red flag. Brown clothing making a comeback? Same vibe. Even HBO’s “The White Lotus” becoming mid is considered a sign of collapse. This generation isn’t tuning into press conferences. They’re tracking culture like a Wall Street ticker.
Data shows Gen Z is not wrong about the decline
The University of Michigan recorded that at the start of 2024, Americans aged 18 to 34 had the highest consumer sentiment of any age group. That didn’t last, as this group’s confidence in the economy fell over 6% since then, while older age groups became slightly more optimistic.
Wall Street’s watching too. Deutsche Bank ran a survey between March 17 and March 20 and found that global strategists believe there’s a 43% chance the U.S. falls into a recession within the next 12 months.
The Conference Board’s consumer expectations index, which tracks how Americans feel about their financial future, just dropped to its lowest point in 12 years. That reading came in far below the line economists use to warn of an incoming recession.
On top of that, March saw Google searches for the word “recession” hit a level not seen since 2022. Everyone’s looking up the same word. Everyone feels the pressure.
James, the professor from Queens College, said the rise in these memes is acting like a “barometer” for how bad things feel right now. “The vibes are off,” he said. He told CNBC that while the jokes may seem dumb or ironic, they reflect how Gen Z processes living in a world that’s constantly economically unstable.
The Know Your Meme site just added “recession indicators” to its archives this month. But this humor isn’t new. James said the memes go back to at least 2019. They’ve just picked up steam again as the economy wobbles and people lose faith in official signs. Instead of watching interest rate announcements, Gen Z’s watching Klarna add food delivery financing and sounding the alarm.
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