Albanian youth living with families less than Serbs, Greeks

The concept is that of newly grown “”, which includes age 25 to 29 and the phenomenon, is that of still living with parents in the same house. To that end, there is no question that the Balkans are prominent, and Albania and Kosovo have certainly too widespread the phenomenon, except not as much as it can think! [...]
To that end, there is no question that the Balkans are prominent, and Albania and Kosovo have certainly too widespread the phenomenon, except not as much as it can think!
According to recent publication by the European Statistics Institute, Eurostat, the record in the region holds one of the European Union countries, Croatia, in which 79.7% of this age group still live with their families.
While Albania and Kosovo are ranked lower, they are ranked fifth and eighth, respectively.
Albania, with 72.8%, leaves behind Montenegro, Serbia and Greece, which are in the figure at 78.8%, 76.4% and 72.9%, respectively.
Kosovo, on the other hand, is ranked even better, as it leaves behind both Northern Macedonia, in which 71% of young people live with parents, as well as a large EU country, Italy, where 69.8% of young people live with families.
In Kosovo, the figure stops at 68.6%.
A lower spot, in the ninth, ranks Portugal at 68.1% and the tenth end of Slovakia by 67.4%.
According to Eurostat itself, the phenomenon is mostly widespread in Southeast Europe.
Prior to this survey, meanwhile, the current settlement of the 25-29 age group is taken, not the civil situation where they are registered.
So the numbers are more than proven and real.
In much lower quotas, meanwhile, Nordic states, as well as major powers such as Germany or France, where young people from an early age prefer to live separately from their family.












