Quantcast

IFS Insights

Sort by Category
  • All Categories

  • Adoption and Foster Care

  • Aging and Elder Care

  • App Accountability

  • Caregiving

  • Child Care

  • Cohabitation

  • Contraception and Abortion

  • Coronavirus

  • Dating

  • Divorce and Break-Ups

  • Economic Mobility

  • Education

  • Family Life

  • Fathers

  • Fertility

  • Friday Five

  • Grandparents

  • Health

  • Immigration

  • Infidelity

  • Interview

  • Marriage

  • Marriage and Relationship Education

  • Media and Technology

  • Men

  • Mortality

  • Mothers

  • Parents

  • Politics

  • Pornography

  • Poverty

  • Public Policy

  • Race

  • Religion

  • Research Brief

  • Sex

  • Single Life

  • Single Parents

  • Substance Abuse

  • Violence, Assault, and Abuse

  • Women

  • Work-Family

  • Working Class


2026

May 20th

In 1976, just 36% of 12th-grade girls said having lots of money was “quite” or “extremely” important in their lives, compared to 55% of teen boys, according to data from the Monitoring the Future study. Over the next 15 years, both boys and girls increasingly reported that being wealthy was important to them. After a plateau through the 2000s, the reported importance of money is again on the rise. In 2024, three-quarters of 12th-grade boys and girls said having lots of money was important to them. Concern for cash tracks broader life priority shifts among teen girls, who also marked “correcting inequalities” and having time for hobbies as important in their lives at higher rates than past generations of teen girls did.

by Grant Bailey

by Grant Bailey

Sign up for our mailing list to receive ongoing updates from IFS.
Join The IFS Mailing List

Contact

Interested in learning more about the work of the Institute for Family Studies? Please feel free to contact us by using your preferred method detailed below.
 

Mailing Address:

P.O. Box 1502
Charlottesville, VA 22902

(434) 260-1048

info@ifstudies.org

Media Inquiries

For media inquiries, contact Chris Bullivant (chris@ifstudies.org).

We encourage members of the media interested in learning more about the people and projects behind the work of the Institute for Family Studies to get started by perusing our "Media Kit" materials.

Media Kit

Wait, Don't Leave!

Before you go, consider subscribing to our weekly emails so we can keep you updated with latest insights, articles, and reports.

Before you go, consider subscribing to IFS so we can keep you updated with news, articles, and reports.

Thank You!

We’ll keep you up to date with the latest from our research and articles.