Thirty percent of adults live with parents

The U.S. Census Bureau says about 30 percent of adults live in a "doubled-up" household because they have lost their home or job and can't make it on their own. Young adults have been affected the most, the Census Bureau said.

Amplify’d from blogs.census.gov
Young adults were especially hard-hit, with 5.9 million people ages 25 to 34 living in their parents’ household in 2011, up from 4.7 million before the recession. That left 14.2 percent of young adults living in their parents’ households in March 2011, up more than two percentage points over the period.
Evidence of Doubling Up in Response to the Economic Downturn, 2007 - 2011

All in all, 61.7 million adults, or 27.7 percent, were doubled-up in 2007, rising to 69.2 million, or 30.0 percent, in 2011.

These young adults who lived with their parents had an official poverty rate of only 8.4 percent, since the income of their entire family is compared with the poverty threshold. If their poverty status were determined by their own income, 45.3 percent would have had income falling below the poverty threshold for a single person under age 65.

Four years later, in spring 2011, the number of such households had climbed to 21.8 million, or 18.3 percent.
These “doubled-up” households are defined as those that include at least one “additional” adult – in other words, a person 18 or older who is not enrolled in school and is not the householder, spouse or cohabiting partner of the householder.
Read more at blogs.census.gov
 

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