A quiet revolution is underway. According to startling new data from the Resolution Foundation, a staggering 68% of Britons aged 18 to 27 have no expectation of ever receiving a full state pension. They are not merely pessimistic; they are architecting new financial realities in the shadow of a system buckling under demographic weight and fiscal strain.
Forget the retirement dreams of the Baby Boomers. The average Gen Z worker, armed with smartphones and a healthy dose of scepticism, is navigating a world where the state pension appears as mythical as a unicorn. Instead, they are turning to a precarious but agile toolkit: cryptocurrency staking, fractional property investments, gig economy earnings, and a dizzying array of side hustles.
This is not about youthful naivety. This generation has witnessed the 2008 financial crisis, the Brexit fallout, and a pandemic that accelerated digital trust. They understand compound interest better than any cohort before, but they also know that the state’s promise of £185.15 per week (the full new state pension) is a fragile contract in a nation with a rapidly aging population and a productivity puzzle.
The math is brutal. Currently, there are roughly three workers for every pensioner. By 2045, that ratio could fall to two-to-one. The state pension, which cost the Treasury £100 billion last year, is on a trajectory that is economically unsustainable without severe tax increases or benefit cuts. Gen Z, ever the pragmatists, have already factored this into their long-term calculus.
Some are turning to Decentralised Finance (DeFi), where smart contracts replace trust in the state. Others are embracing the new “portfolio career”, amassing multiple income streams that they hope will be more resilient than a single pension pot. The rise of the “side hustle” is not just a trend; it is a survival strategy. Young people are using platforms like OnlyFans, Etsy, and Uber to supplement income, often skipping traditional employment benefits in favour of flexibility.
However, this DIY approach carries immense risk. Cryptocurrency is volatile. The gig economy offers no sick pay or holiday leave. Fractional property investments can be illiquid. And the knowledge gap is vast: many young people are making high-stakes financial decisions without the safety net that their parents enjoyed. The Financial Conduct Authority has warned that unregulated crypto investments are “very high risk” and consumers could lose all their money.
Yet, the narrative is not entirely bleak. This generation is developing financial literacy skills earlier than any before. They are more likely to negotiate salaries, invest in low-cost index funds, and challenge the status quo of the 40-year career. They are also collectively pushing for reform. The rise of “pension strike” movements, where young activists demand climate-conscious investment from their pension providers, shows a desire to reshape the system rather than just abandon it.
Where does this leave policymakers? The state pension is a political third rail. No government wants to cut it, but continuing as is demographically impossible. Raising the retirement age, means-testing, or increasing National Insurance are all deeply unpopular options. The government’s recent “Pensions Review” has been slow, with many critics calling it a “sticking plaster” on a gaping wound.
One radical concept gaining traction is the idea of a “Universal Basic Pension” funded by tech taxes or carbon levies. Another is to allow people to access their pension pots later in life, but with more flexibility for early withdrawal for housing or education. Gen Z’s lifetime savings potential is enormous if the right incentives are in place.
Perhaps the real story here is not about financial strategy but about intergenerational trust. When young people no longer believe that their tax contributions will return to them in old age, the social contract begins to fray. The risk is not just a generation retiring in poverty, but a society where the very concept of collective welfare is replaced by individual, and often isolated, risk management.
For the Silicon Valley ex-pats like myself, this feels like a feedback loop of disruption. The technology that enabled the sharing economy and crypto is now reshaping the most fundamental of government promises. The question is whether the state can adapt its algorithms of care to a new economic reality, or whether Gen Z’s self-help retirement plans will become the new normal.
The clock is ticking. Every year of policy inaction deepens the belief that the only safety net is the one you build for yourself. For a generation that has already redefined work, consumption, and communication, retirement might be next. And they are building it one gig, one token, one house hack at a time.








