What is it about?
40% of young Australians are living with their parents, representing nearly a 20% increase over the 2000s. First, we examine differences in co-residence rates between socio-demographic groups, considering both young adults’ and their parents’ characteristics. Second, we analyze associations between co-residence and mental health, asking who living at home works well for, and who it does not.
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Why is it important?
Understanding this rapidly growing living arrangement is important because of its potential repercussions - both on an individual and a societal level. On an individual level, we find young adults living at home typically fare worse in terms of mental health than their peers living independently. Concerningly, young adults who have seen the steepest increase in co-residence exhibit the worst mental health when living at home, including older adults, females, and those residing outside of major cities. Even when co-residence works well for young people, reliance on this arrangement to substitute a lack of affordable rental options is problematic, as it’s available to some people and not others. Young adults are more likely to live at home in households where parents earn more, are married or in partnerships, and live in more expensive houses, detached houses, and in major cities. They are less likely to live in social rental housing, and in flats. The concern then is that a growing reliance on co-residence hinders social mobility and risks driving further wedges between young adults with resourceful and urban parents, and those without.
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This page is a summary of: Parental co-residence and young adults’ mental health, PLoS ONE, November 2023, PLOS,
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0294248.
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