According to the Pew Research Center, Generation Z can be defined as anyone born between 1997 and 2012. Merriam-Webster finds that “Generally, members of Generation Z are tech-savvy, pragmatic, open-minded, individualistic but also socially responsible.”
Generation Z is diverse. According to the Annie E. Casey Foundation, “Gen Z will be the last generation that is predominantly white. A slight majority of Gen Z‑ers (52%) is white; 25% is Hispanic, 14% is Black and 4% is Asian.”
Gen Z-ers are also the first “digital natives.” They were born into a world with advanced technologies and have always had information at their fingertips.
Also, many Gen Z-ers were born and raised in a time of great financial turmoil – during the Great Recession. As a result, Gen Z-ers are “driven by pragmatism and security.”
This is one reason why those born into Generation Z have developed an affinity for cash. Bloomberg states that, “Adult members of Generation Z, a group raised on the internet and social media apps, are more focused on savings and gaining financial literacy coming out of the pandemic.”
Safety First
Cash provides security and autonomy for its users. In these days of digital payments, identity theft and fraud have increased over the past years.
Identity Force, a subsidiary of TransUnion, reported that ”Consumers filed 2.2 million fraud reports in 2020, accounting for $3.3 billion in losses”. And “47% of Americans experienced financial identity theft in 2020.”
Using cash for payments eliminates the risk of identity theft at the point of sale.
For Gen Z-ers looking for stability, connection, and engagement, cash is part of that equation.
New Mexico is one of the latest states to begin allowing recreational marijuana use by adults age 21 or older. The new rules began April 1, 2022.
Signed into Law
Last April, New Mexico’s governor Michelle Lujan Grisham signed into law two separate measures that amended the state’s marijuana policies. House Bill 2 legalized and regulates recreational marijuana usage for adults, including possession, production, and sales. Adults will have the legal right to purchase up to two ounces of cannabis products or up to 16 grams of cannabis extract from licensed marijuana retailers.
The second piece of cannabis legislation passed and signed in New Mexico was Senate Bill 2, which began an automatic review and expungement of low-grade marijuana convictions.
When signing the bills into law, Governor Grisham stated, “The legalization of adult-use cannabis paves the way for the creation of a new economic driver in our state with the promise of creating thousands of good paying jobs for years to come. We are going to increase consumer safety by creating a bona fide industry. We’re going to start righting past wrongs of this country’s failed war on drugs. And we’re going to break new ground in an industry that may well transform New Mexico’s economic future for the better.”
Hitting the Ground Running
In preparation for the April 1, 2022 implementation date, New Mexico’s Cannabis Control Division worked to ensure a smooth start to recreational marijuana sales.
Victor Reyes, deputy director of the Cannabis Control Division says that nearly 100 licenses have already been issued for producers, manufactures, and retailers across the state.
“We feel a really big responsibility, you know, this has the potential to be an industry that brings in $300 million in sales annually, 11,000 new jobs for our state,” Reyes stated. “We haven’t seen that type of an opportunity. Um, you know, certainly not in my lifetime.”This may, indeed, be accurate. One economist estimated that New Mexico may gain as many as 11,000 jobs and up to $620 million in sales by the fifth year of the legislation’s implementation.