Skip to content
Apply
Stories

Young people are leaving their jobs in record numbers—and not going back

People in this story

Time, October 2021

Life for Whitney Green looks a little different these days. She wakes up to the sounds of Rome: scooter engines echoing off cobblestones, the lilting chatter of café patrons collecting their morning espresso shots. She goes to Italian classes in the afternoons. She eats bowls of pistachio gelato and handmade pasta, and watches tourists congregate at the Trevi Fountain and Piazza Navona. She’s teaching herself to play keyboard and building a website for her dream job—her own telehealth practice. It’s a far cry from her past life as a community mental-health therapist for at-risk youth in San Francisco, a job she quit in June to move to Italy with her girlfriend.

Green is one of millions of Americans leaving traditional jobs this year—and choosing not to recommit to clocking in at all. This is the highest mass resignation the U.S. has seen since 2019, pre-pandemic, and the numbers are still rising. In June, 3.9 million quit. In July, it was another 3.9 million. In August, 4.3 million. The numbers are even more notable for young workers: in September, nearly a quarter of workers ages 20 to 34 were not considered part of the U.S. workforce—some 14 million Americans, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, who were neither working nor looking for work.

Continue reading at Time.

More Stories

image of donald trump in suit with blurred background

Donald Trump scores win on abortion

04.19.2024
image of proposed plan for newbury street plaza project set to debut this summer

Coming soon: towers and a shopping plaza over the Pike in Back Bay

04.19.2024
image of submerged car in rainwater amidst flooding in the region

Playing God with the atmosphere

04.19.24
All Stories