Why do so many [great children] still live with their parents?
![Why do so many [great children] still live with their parents?](/assets/placeholder.webp)
This is a script published in the fastcompany by author Charlie Sorrell, which comes into Albanian from Periscope. Even in our country, there is an outstanding lack of awareness of independence and maturity where living alone is necessary, away from parents. Big babies is a term used by one [...]
This is a script published in the fastcompany by author Charlie Sorrell, which comes into Albanian from Periscope. Even in our country, there is an outstanding lack of awareness of independence and maturity where living alone is necessary, away from parents. Big baby is a term used by an Italian politician [bamocation] who describes adults between the ages of 18-32 who still live with their parents.
Full text:
We already know that more young adults live at home with their parents now than at any time since 1870. Now, thanks to the data from online lender Ernest, we know these people stay home.
This company analysed 60 thousand loan applications to have a picture of the living circumstances of applicants, further examining factors such as gender, age, location and education. These statistics released by Ernest showed that 15% of their applicants live with their parents, which is half the number of adults living at home.
But Ernest's data also see a high proportion of those adults standing at home in high-cost residential areas, and that makes sense.
Age is also an important factor, with nearly half of all 18-22-year-olds staying in their parents' homes, with the proportion steadily dropping when they reach 50 years of age to only 1%. These people, that's 1 percent, maybe they've come back and didn't stay at home, to take care of aging parents.
Ernes ' figures also show percentages in terms of states. New Jersey has more adults staying home than anywhere else: 35.5%. Out of 48 surveyed states, Kentucky is at the bottom of the list, with only 5.1% of adults living with their parents. This geographical circulation is related to the cost of living in these countries.
In fact, money or its absence seems to be a key factor in determining who still lives with the parents. If we look at the chart, we note that as much as the profits are higher, the existence of living with parents goes down. However, there are also some specifics. “Some still living with parents earn high salaries that allow them to live independently,” says the Ernest report. “Like older groups in age analysis, these big winners may be older adults in their families living with their parents to give, not to get help. ”
All this analysis examines other different factors, but we need to consider one specific: university diplomas. Those who have a law degree are more likely to leave their parents than any other, because lawyers are paid a lot. On the other hand, those who have studied psychology and human science are more likely to stay and rot at home, and this may have less money than with the fact that they manage to endure parents as very difficult people to endure. A big surprise is that graduates in computer and IT science are second in the likelihood of leaving the parents' house. Finally, this dissects the myth of nerds living in their parents ' basement.
This trend may not be fast - passed. In many European countries, family ties are strong, and children are more likely to live with their parents until the end of their 20 ' s, and on occasion even after marriage. It's partly the economic need that keeps this going, but it's been happening for as long as it's already become a certain cultural element. With the economic future looking black maybe the dream of big babies finding a good job, buying a house and creating a family there, it could be seen as one lucky thing in history.












