The Eurostat figures reveal that 66% of young Italians, between 18 and 34 years, can not leave the family because of the crisis. At home, especially the boys. The positive record goes instead to Denmark, where the guys who do not live alone are still only 15.8%
They are two out of three (almost 7.4 million), young people aged between 18 and 34 who still live at home. The Eurostat data reveal that 66% of young Italians, whether working or not, can not leave the family because of the crisis and to live on their own. Numbers much higher than their peers in France (34.2%), German (42.3%) and English (34.2%).
The record low is also about a significant increase compared to 2008, where under 35 who remained at home with their parents accounted for 60.5%, then 5 points less than today. In France grew by less than two points, and Germany even decreased. The primacy, positively, goes to Denmark, where the boys between 18 and 34 who still live at home with parents are only 15.8%.
In Italy, the most limiting age adult ranging between 25 and 34 years, almost one out of two (49.4%) live with at least one parent, an increase of almost five points over 2008, and in the face of 11.3% of French, 16 , 8% of Germans and just 13.8% of the British. In this age Italians exceed even the Spaniards more than ten points, which are at 37.4%, but they are better than the Greeks, Bulgarians and Slovaks (which are more than 50%).
still, young people in the age group between 25 and 34 years, in Italy, stay at home parents even if employed in the working world. In 2013 were occupied 60.2% of the people of that age (although down by ten points compared to 2008, when to have a job and live equally in the family was even 70.1% of people).
At home it seems that they remain mostly boys, with a record of 57.5% between 25 and 34 years, compared with 41.1% of the females, which are still up sharply from 36.4% 2008.
Other positive record in Denmark, where the girls who stay at home parents are just 0.4% of the total. 10.5% instead in Germany, and 8.1% in France.
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