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Adults Living with Their Parents At all Time High

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  • Adults Living with Their Parents At all Time High



    Whether in their 20s or 30s, black or white, in the West or Northeast, adult kids find there's no place like home when their finances are in a tailspin or their relationships in shambles.

    The number of young adults ages 20 to 34 who lived with their parents jumped from 17% in 1980 to 24% in 2007-09 — the Great Recession— according to a detailed analysis out today.

    The rise was sharpest among those under 25 — a new high of 43% vs. 32% in 1980 — but it increased largely across the board. Even among 30- to 34-year-olds, nearly one in 10 lived with parents.

    "This 'Great Recession' has had tremendous effects that previous smaller recessions did not," says Zhenchao Qian, a sociology professor at Ohio State University and the author of the report for the US2010 Project, which studies trends in American society. "The surprise mostly is that it's increasing for every group."

    The only segment not affected: young adults with graduate degrees. The share living with parents has stayed at 8% since 1980.

    The number of kids never moving out or coming back after college or divorce had declined in the 1990s but increased faster during the last recession, which hit young adults the hardest. Unemployment among young workers has hovered above 12%.

    Financial insecurity, coupled with massive student loan debt, has exacerbated another trend that might encourage some to live with their parents: delaying marriage and postponing having children.

    The biggest impact has been on lower-income groups and the less educated. In 1980, 18% of young adults living with parents had a high school education. In 2007-09, it had jumped to 29%.

    "Sometimes young people live at home for practical reasons," says Sally Koslow, author of Slouching Toward Adulthood: Observations From the Not-So-Empty Nest. "Sometimes it's for the lifestyle. They don't have to pay and have access to a full refrigerator."



    •Men are much more likely to live with parents than women, partly because they marry later.

    "It's not the only reason," Qian says. "Compared with daughters, sons have fewer domestic responsibilities — such as cleaning and cooking — when they live home with parents."

    •Non-Hispanic whites had the lowest percentage living with parents. Asians had the biggest jump (from 17% in 1980 to 26% in 2007-09). Qian attributes that to later marriages among Asians, cultural traditions and a greater likelihood to live in expensive regions.

    Hispanics' rates were lower (24%), largely because many parents of immigrants do not live in the USA. Blacks (27%) and Native Americans (30%) had the highest.

    Koslow says it has become far more socially acceptable for adult children to live at home for long periods of time.

    She was recently asked to write a piece for Cosmopolitan: tips for women who date men who still live at home.

    "I don't think young people feel any embarrassment or stigma," Koslow says.


    Percent of young adults aged 25-29 living with parents, 2007-2009:

    Highest

    1. Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, Conn. (34%)
    2. Honolulu (32%)
    3. McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Texas (31%)
    4. Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach (31%)
    5. New York-Northern N.J.-Long Island (30%)
    6. Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, Calif. (28%)
    7. Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana (28%)
    8. El Paso, Texas (28%)
    9. Scranton-Wilkes-Barre, Pa. (27%)
    10. Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif. (26%)

    Lowest

    100. Des Moines-West Des Moines, Iowa (8%)
    99. Raleigh-Cary, N.C. (9%)
    98. Boise-Nampa, Ida. (9%)
    97. Austin-Round Rock, Texas (10%)
    96. Madison, Wis. (10%)
    95. Columbus, Ohio (11%)
    94. Omaha-Council Bluffs, Neb.-Iowa (12%)
    93. Oklahoma City (12%)
    92. Colorado Springs (12%)
    91. Provo-Orem, Utah (12%)




    USATODAY

  • #2
    Nothing wrong with it, especially when mom cooks good

    Comment


    • #3
      This has a positive.

      With the coming collapse just a year away, maybe a few months away, the coming catastrophe will force families to bond together.

      And as things go worse there is no other option but to turn back to God.

      Comment


      • #4
        This article is 3 years old (2009)? I remember reading about it a long time ago.

        Comment


        • #5
          Ay when times get rough it is better to move home than to do illegal stuff to get by or live in poverty.people should just spend that time bettering themselves and saving

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          • #6
            I don't see a problem with it. I moved out before I was 20 but I've found myself time to time crashing back at home for some time. With education bills pile up and it just makes more sense to do this. Also you can save money or you will have more money to do stuff and meet new people. It isn't easy to live on your own, especially if you're single. Much easier to find someone to settle down with and split the cost. So until you find that, fuk it, why not live at home.

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            • #7
              if I wasn't married I would be living with my moms...

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              • #8
                Originally posted by jose830 View Post
                if I wasn't married I would be living with my moms...
                how many you got?

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Check View Post
                  I don't see a problem with it. I moved out before I was 20 but I've found myself time to time crashing back at home for some time. With education bills pile up and it just makes more sense to do this. Also you can save money or you will have more money to do stuff and meet new people. It isn't easy to live on your own, especially if you're single. Much easier to find someone to settle down with and split the cost. So until you find that, fuk it, why not live at home.
                  A lot of my friends moved out and lived with eachother as room mates. They got a big 3 bedroom apartment and all had good paying jobs. They had fun with all the money they saved but all 3 were big slobs and 6 months later all moved back to their parents

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                  • #10
                    I was almost living in Holland or Germany but struggled to adapt to the driving so i'm back home with my muim and dad .I might be going back to Holland next month though or moving down the line ( England Wales ) .Hopefully Holland and I can do the job and that will be me set for life .I'm 30 next month man gutted 6 weeks .I'm f-----g off somewher incase of any surprise parties , hopefully Holland .

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