Are you a Dink, Alice or Henry? How social mobility is different for today’s young people
- Written by Renaud Foucart, Senior Lecturer in Economics, Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster University
When your parents were in their 20s and 30s, they probably had a job, a house and financial security. A generation later, you get a variety of food they could not have imagined, low-cost air travel and a smartphone more powerful than the fastest supercomputers of the 1990s.
This new reality is leading to the resurgence of a different kind of class identification for young people. Middle class doesn’t look like it used to. Instead, you may consider yourself a “Dink” or a “Henry”.
Standing for “dual income and no kids”, Dink was coined in the 1980s[1] to reflect the lifestyle of couples who chose the joys of technology, travel and restaurants over raising a family. As fertility rates fall worldwide[2], the term is making a comeback, with TikTok users[3] showing off a life of boutique workouts, fancy brunches and wanderlust.
A woman born in England or Wales in 2007 is projected to have her first child at age 35[4] and to have an average of 1.52 children, compared with 2.04 for her mother’s generation.
The Dink lifestyle is attractive to some: more money and time[5] for yourselves. But on the salary of an average UK household, you still won’t be able to buy an average house.
Why does it seem so much harder now? It’s not that this generation is poorer: on average[6], full-time employees between 18 and 21 years old make £499 a week. It rises fast: for those aged 22-29 the figure is £648, and £805 for 30-39.
For all age groups, salaries have barely increased since 2008, once you control for the fact that prices have risen by a lot[7]. Still, compared with someone who entered the workforce 25 years ago, you will earn, on average, about 15% more even when adjusting for prices.
The key is that, while you earn more than your parents and grandparents, what’s cheap and what’s expensive has completely flipped[8].
The traditional middle class was defined by homeownership and financial security, both things you could achieve through professional work. What unites today’s Henrys, Alices and Dinks is they can enjoy consumption levels their parents in the same social class would never have imagined, but can’t buy the same house as them.
The solution to this is simple economics, but complex politics: if you want cheaper houses, you must build more of them. That means building in less desirable locations, turning individual houses into flats, or overcoming opposition from older homeowners[20] who often resist new housing developments in their neighbourhoods.
So, when your judgmental uncle remarks that “if you ate fewer avocados and lattes, you’d be able to buy a house just like I did”, you may want to explain how the relative prices of an avocado[21] and a house[22] have changed over time. If you’re not saving for a deposit, buying avocados may simply be the most rational thing to do.
References
- ^ coined in the 1980s (time.com)
- ^ fertility rates fall worldwide (ourworldindata.org)
- ^ with TikTok users (time.com)
- ^ at age 35 (www.ons.gov.uk)
- ^ time (www.economist.com)
- ^ on average (commonslibrary.parliament.uk)
- ^ risen by a lot (www.ons.gov.uk)
- ^ has completely flipped (www.visualcapitalist.com)
- ^ Quarter Life series (theconversation.com)
- ^ a person’s time (www.nber.org)
- ^ have increased twice as fast as everything else (www.ft.com)
- ^ receiving Universal Credit (www.gov.uk)
- ^ the first trap (www.gov.uk)
- ^ in a cheaper region (backup.ons.gov.uk)
- ^ of the roughly 2 million taxpayers (moneyweek.com)
- ^ becomes 60% (moneyweek.com)
- ^ pay an extra 9% (ifs.org.uk)
- ^ actually lose money (www.ft.com)
- ^ Andrii Nekrasov/Shutterstock (www.shutterstock.com)
- ^ older homeowners (www.ons.gov.uk)
- ^ prices of an avocado (www.ons.gov.uk)
- ^ a house (landregistry.data.gov.uk)







