Young people living in the household in our country are two-thirds of the total number of people in the range between 18 and 34 years compared with 34.2% in France, 42.3% in Germany and 34.2% of the British
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Rome – The young living in the household in our country are two thirds of the total of the people in the band between 18 and 34 years compared with 34.2% of the French , 42.3% of the Germany and 34.2% of the English .
It is, if you go to make the comparison with population data Istat , almost 7.4 million people . The figure, however, according to Eurostat data, is growing by more than five points compared to 2008 (it was 60.5%) while in France grew by less than two points and Germany has decreased (in Denmark the proportion of those living at home with parents is 15.8% of the total under 35).
In Italy the percentage of young people who are unable to leave the family home is also high in the age group most “adult”. Almost one in two young people between 25 and 34 years (49.4%), in fact, lives with at least one parent (an increase of almost five points on 2008) compared to 28.8% in the EU-28 and of ’1.4% of Danes (11.3% of the French and 16.8% of the Germans and the British are just 13.8%). In this age Italians “mammon” exceed even the Spaniards over ten points (are 37.4%) but they do better than the Greeks, Bulgarians and Slovaks (which are more than 50%).
Often Italians remain to live in the family of origin even if they have a job : in the range between 25 and 34 years, in fact, in 2013 were occupied 60.2% people (although down about 10 points to 2008 when they were occupied 70.1 %% of the people in this age group). Among young adults living at home throughout the band considered (18-34 years) over a quarter claims to have a full time job (27.2%), although down compared to the percentage in 2008 (37, 6% of those who were still living in the family).
If you look at the more adult-end between those who are still in the house between 25 and 34 years in Italy, 43% have a full time job (it was 53% in 2008). Stay at home especially males (57.5% between 25 and 34 years) while females who remain in the family are 41.1% (but up sharply from 36.4% in 2008).
Denmark girls between 25 and 34 years who stay at home with their parents are just 0.4% of the total (10.5% in Germany and the ’8.1% in France).
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