Islamabad, January 1, 2025: As the calendar turns to 2025, the world welcomes not just a new year but also the birth of a new generational cohort—Generation Beta. Spanning from 2025 to 2039, Gen Beta will be the second generation born entirely within the 21st century, following their predecessors, Generation Alpha (2010–2024).
Many members of Gen Beta are projected to live well into the 22nd century, experiencing unprecedented technological advancements and grappling with escalating climate crises. According to a report by Axios, this generation will witness changes on a scale that could surpass those faced by their predecessors.
Social researcher and demographer Mark McCrindle, who coined the term “Generation Alpha,” estimates that Gen Beta will grow to include approximately 2.1 billion individuals, slightly larger than Gen Alpha’s 2 billion. By 2035, McCrindle predicts, Gen Beta will comprise 16% of the global population.
Jean Twenge, author of Generations: The Real Differences Between Gen Z, Millennials, Gen X, Boomers and Silents — and What They Mean for America’s Future, notes that generational boundaries become clearer as cohorts mature. She emphasizes that the technology shaping social relationships during their formative years will have the most profound influence on their lives.
For Gen Z, this defining technology was social media; for Gen Alpha, it has been immersive virtual platforms like Minecraft and Roblox. For Gen Beta, generative AI is poised to play a pivotal role, with its transformative potential shaping the ways they interact, learn, and grow.
In addition to technological evolution, Gen Beta will also experience significant demographic shifts. As global fertility rates decline and life expectancy increases, discussions about population dynamics will pivot. “For Gen Betas, the concern won’t be overpopulation,” McCrindle explains, “but population sustainability.”
This emerging generation is stepping into a world marked by rapid innovation and profound challenges, setting the stage for an era defined by resilience, adaptation, and transformation.