Are young people less independent in the south compared to the north?
OrangeAccording6668 on
How many times is this gonna be reposted?
AskMeAboutEveryThing on
Being a Dane, finding 4% HIGH – and then looking at other countries… π
KevinBaudruche on
Wow up to 34 years ?!
So religion (or family conservatism/habits) and rent/property access are somewhat big factors. Along with country support system for young ones.
Sub-Mongoloid on
Nice that they had no data for Iceland but still wanted it to feel included.
Accomplished-Try-658 on
Another great reason to not have kids.
Jaws0798 on
Huge difference between someone who is 25 and someone who is 33 tbh.
tmb28 on
I’m still officially check-in in my parents home, despite living somwhere else for 15 years π thats the miracle of data from Poland…
relinquisshed on
Yeah I make 700β¬ and live with my parents. I save as much as I can and even that’s like 300 per month, 400 at most. If I moved out I wouldn’t be able to save at all.
AggravatingBridge on
Like in under every post like that:
Polands data is not accurate as people in Poland do not care about main address registration. Most young people move out in early 20s. They live in rentals and you donβt register your addresses in rentals in Poland (you can but itβs not common at all) so I would say that this number for Poland represents the percentage of young adults that for sure do not own their own place more then the percentage of adults that still live with their parents.
I always wonder how much of that is cultural and how much is financial?
MammothTrifle3616 on
I moved away from my parents in my mid-twenties, and I felt like an avant-garde weirdo π My younger brother still lives with our mom even though he’s approaching 40.
To be honest the prices of renting or buying something are CRAZY in Croatia at the moment. My wife and I were lucky and managed to buy our apartment when the prices were ridiculously low compared to today.
Born-Yoghurt-401 on
The difference between France and Spain is astonishing. Not a catholic thing after all?
EmergencyAtTheIKEA on
Is this cultural?
Krek_Tavis on
For Belgium and other small countries, I assume the distances between parent’s home and an university are not long enough to justify renting an apartment explains some of it.
18 commenti
source: as stated on map
Are young people less independent in the south compared to the north?
How many times is this gonna be reposted?
Being a Dane, finding 4% HIGH – and then looking at other countries… π
Wow up to 34 years ?!
So religion (or family conservatism/habits) and rent/property access are somewhat big factors. Along with country support system for young ones.
Nice that they had no data for Iceland but still wanted it to feel included.
Another great reason to not have kids.
Huge difference between someone who is 25 and someone who is 33 tbh.
I’m still officially check-in in my parents home, despite living somwhere else for 15 years π thats the miracle of data from Poland…
Yeah I make 700β¬ and live with my parents. I save as much as I can and even that’s like 300 per month, 400 at most. If I moved out I wouldn’t be able to save at all.
Like in under every post like that:
Polands data is not accurate as people in Poland do not care about main address registration. Most young people move out in early 20s. They live in rentals and you donβt register your addresses in rentals in Poland (you can but itβs not common at all) so I would say that this number for Poland represents the percentage of young adults that for sure do not own their own place more then the percentage of adults that still live with their parents.
18% in the UK if anyone is interested – https://ifs.org.uk/news/share-25-34-year-olds-living-parents-over-third-mid-2000s#:~:text=Between%202006%20and%202024%2C%20the,and%20those%20from%20Bangladeshi%20backgrounds.
I always wonder how much of that is cultural and how much is financial?
I moved away from my parents in my mid-twenties, and I felt like an avant-garde weirdo π My younger brother still lives with our mom even though he’s approaching 40.
To be honest the prices of renting or buying something are CRAZY in Croatia at the moment. My wife and I were lucky and managed to buy our apartment when the prices were ridiculously low compared to today.
The difference between France and Spain is astonishing. Not a catholic thing after all?
Is this cultural?
For Belgium and other small countries, I assume the distances between parent’s home and an university are not long enough to justify renting an apartment explains some of it.
r/iberiacykablyat