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TwitterGen Z and millennial men in the United States are more likely to live with their parents than women in the same age group. In 2023, approximately 11 percent of women aged 25 to 34 lived in their parents' home, compared to almost 19 percent of men. When looking at the age group of 18 to 24, the difference was less drastic.
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TwitterIn 2023, around ** percent of men and ** percent of women between the age of 25 and 34 in the United States lived with a spouse, whereas ** and ** percent respectively lived with a parent.
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TwitterIn 2024, approximately 71 percent of males and 51 percent of females that were aged 20 still lived with their parents in the United Kingdom. At age 25, 43 percent of males and 29 percent of females who were 25 lived with their parents, while by age 30, 18 percent of men lived with their parents, compared with six percent of women.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Total number of young adults aged 15 to 34 years and total number of young adults aged 20 to 34 years in the UK living with their parents.
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TwitterIn 2023, nearly 58 percent of 18-24-year old men in the United States lived with a parent, whereas approximately *** percent lived alone. In comparison, the share of women living with a parent was about **, compared to *** percent who lived alone.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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The European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) collects timely and comparable multidimensional microdata on income, poverty, social exclusion and living conditions.
The EU-SILC collection is a key instrument for providing information required by the European Semester ([1]) and the European Pillar of Social Rights, and the main source of data for microsimulation purposes and flash estimates of income distribution and poverty rates.
AROPE remains crucial to monitor European social policies, especially to monitor the EU 2030 target on poverty and social exclusion. For more information, please consult EU social indicators.
The EU-SILC instrument provides two types of data:
EU-SILC collects:
The variables collected are grouped by topic and detailed topic and transmitted to Eurostat in four main files (D-File, H-File, R-File and P-file).
The domain ‘Income and Living Conditions’ covers the following topics: persons at risk of poverty or social exclusion, income inequality, income distribution and monetary poverty, living conditions, material deprivation, and EU-SILC ad-hoc modules, which are structured into collections of indicators on specific topics.
In 2023, in addition to annual data, in EU-SILC were collected: the three yearly module on labour market and housing, the six yearly module on intergenerational transmission of advantages and disadvantages, housing difficulties, and the ad hoc subject on households energy efficiency.
Starting from 2021 onwards, the EU quality reports use the structure of the Single Integrated Metadata Structure (SIMS).
([1]) The European Semester is the European Union’s framework for the coordination and surveillance of economic and social policies.
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TwitterIn Italy, almost 70 percent of young people aged from 18 to 34 years were living with their parents in 2023. Specifically, 63 percent of them were females, whereas the share of males was higher, 73 percent.
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TwitterAround 22% of American adults are still on their parents’ phone plan. Read on to learn how each generation handles family plans and how to get your own plan if you’re ready for financial independence.
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TwitterFamilies of tax filers; Census families with children by age of children and children by age groups (final T1 Family File; T1FF).
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TwitterNumber and percentage of live births, by age group of mother, 1991 to most recent year.
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TwitterThis statistic displays the results of a youth survey conducted among ***** year olds across ** states across India in 2016 about who they lived with. A majority of respondents, about ** percent, lived with their parents, while only **** percent lived with a friend, in a hostel or alone during the survey period.
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TwitterGen Z and millennial men in the United States are more likely to live with their parents than women in the same age group. In 2023, approximately 11 percent of women aged 25 to 34 lived in their parents' home, compared to almost 19 percent of men. When looking at the age group of 18 to 24, the difference was less drastic.