This thesis examines the differences in consumption patterns across generations (Baby Boomers, Gen X, Millennials, Gen Z) and countries with varying levels of economic development. It adopts a multidisciplinary approach combining economics, psychology, and sociology to explore how income, wealth, digitalization, future expectations, and institutional context shape spending behavior. The research employs a comparative methodology based on microeconomic data (Eurostat HBS, US Consumer Expenditure Survey, China Urban Household Survey) and macroeconomic indicators (GDP, social spending, inequality), analyzing consumption by category, savings rates, debt levels, and perceived well-being. It compares generational consumption behavior in Europe, the United States, and China, highlighting how younger generations tend to prioritize experiential and digital consumption, while showing lower asset accumulation and greater financial caution. Findings reveal a widening generational gap, exacerbated by recent economic crises (2008, COVID-19, 2022–2023 inflation), which have made youth consumption more cautious and fragmented. These trends have implications for the sustainability of welfare systems, economic growth, and the need for more inclusive and redistributive public policies. The analysis underlines the urgency of viewing consumption not only as an economic act but also as a cultural and psychological expression. It concludes by suggesting strategies to promote a more equitable and sustainable intergenerational balance.
Questa tesi analizza le differenze nei modelli di consumo tra generazioni (Baby Boomer, Gen X, Millennial, Gen Z) e tra Paesi con diversi livelli di sviluppo economico, attraverso un approccio multidisciplinare che integra economia, psicologia e sociologia. Il comportamento di spesa delle varie coorti è influenzato da fattori come reddito, ricchezza, digitalizzazione, aspettative future e contesto istituzionale. L’elaborato adotta una metodologia comparativa basata su dati microeconomici (Eurostat HBS, US Consumer Expenditure Survey, China Urban Household Survey) e macroeconomici (PIL, spesa sociale, disuguaglianza), analizzando consumi per categoria, tassi di risparmio, livelli di indebitamento e benessere percepito. Vengono confrontati i comportamenti generazionali in Europa, Stati Uniti e Cina, evidenziando come le giovani generazioni privilegino consumi esperienziali e digitali, mostrando minore accumulo patrimoniale e maggior cautela finanziaria. I risultati rivelano un divario crescente tra generazioni, aggravato dalle recenti crisi economiche (2008, COVID-19, inflazione 2022–2023), che hanno reso i consumi giovanili più prudenti e frammentati. Le implicazioni riguardano la sostenibilità dei sistemi di welfare, la crescita economica e la necessità di politiche pubbliche più inclusive e redistributive. L’analisi evidenzia l’urgenza di comprendere i consumi come espressione non solo economica ma anche culturale e psicologica, e suggerisce strategie per favorire un riequilibrio intergenerazionale più equo e sostenibile.
Esplorazione dei consumi intragenerazionali: analisi tra paesi
SCARPIS, GREGORIO
2024/2025
Abstract
This thesis examines the differences in consumption patterns across generations (Baby Boomers, Gen X, Millennials, Gen Z) and countries with varying levels of economic development. It adopts a multidisciplinary approach combining economics, psychology, and sociology to explore how income, wealth, digitalization, future expectations, and institutional context shape spending behavior. The research employs a comparative methodology based on microeconomic data (Eurostat HBS, US Consumer Expenditure Survey, China Urban Household Survey) and macroeconomic indicators (GDP, social spending, inequality), analyzing consumption by category, savings rates, debt levels, and perceived well-being. It compares generational consumption behavior in Europe, the United States, and China, highlighting how younger generations tend to prioritize experiential and digital consumption, while showing lower asset accumulation and greater financial caution. Findings reveal a widening generational gap, exacerbated by recent economic crises (2008, COVID-19, 2022–2023 inflation), which have made youth consumption more cautious and fragmented. These trends have implications for the sustainability of welfare systems, economic growth, and the need for more inclusive and redistributive public policies. The analysis underlines the urgency of viewing consumption not only as an economic act but also as a cultural and psychological expression. It concludes by suggesting strategies to promote a more equitable and sustainable intergenerational balance.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Tesi Scarpis Gregorio.pdf
accesso aperto
Dimensione
1.01 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.01 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
The text of this website © Università degli studi di Padova. Full Text are published under a non-exclusive license. Metadata are under a CC0 License
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/93571