Volume 25 - Article 20 | Pages 629–666  

The changing determinants of UK young adults' living arrangements

By Juliet Stone, Ann Berrington, Jane Falkingham

Abstract

The postponement of partnership formation and parenthood in the context of an early average age at leaving home has resulted in increased heterogeneity in the living arrangements of young adults in the UK. More young adults now remain in the parental home, or live independently of the parental home but outside of a family. The extent to which these trends are explained by the increased immigration of foreign-born young adults, the expansion in higher education, and the increased economic insecurity faced by young adults are examined. Shared non-family living is particularly prominent among those with experience of higher education, whilst labour market uncertainty is associated with an extended period of co-residence with parents.

Author's Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

Educational differences in timing and quantum of childbearing in Britain: A study of cohorts born 1940−1969
Volume 33 - Article 26

Investigating the application of generalized additive models to discrete-time event history analysis for birth events
Volume 47 - Article 22

Attitudes and preferences towards future old-age support amongst tomorrow’s elders in China
Volume 43 - Article 11

The role of education in the intersection of partnership transitions and motherhood in Europe and the United States
Volume 39 - Article 27

Cross-national differences in women's repartnering behaviour in Europe: The role of individual demographic characteristics
Volume 37 - Article 8

The fertility of recent migrants to England and Wales
Volume 34 - Article 36

Gender Inequalities in Employment and Wage-earning among Economic Migrants in Chinese Cities
Volume 34 - Article 6

Commitment and the changing sequence of cohabitation, childbearing, and marriage: Insights from qualitative research in the UK
Volume 33 - Article 12

Towards a new understanding of cohabitation: Insights from focus group research across Europe and Australia
Volume 31 - Article 34

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research

An alternative version of the second demographic transition? Changing pathways to first marriage in Japan
Volume 49 - Article 16    | Keywords: cohabitation, first marriages, pattern of disadvantage, premarital children, second demographic transition, transition

Socioeconomic differentials in fertility in South Korea
Volume 44 - Article 39    | Keywords: education, family, fertility, gender, housing, inequality, Korea, labor market, nonstandard work, parity

The social context of retrospective-prospective changes in pregnancy desire during the transition to adulthood: The role of fathers and intimate relationships
Volume 44 - Article 38    | Keywords: ambivalence, partnerships, pregnancy intentions, unintended pregnancy, young adulthood

Explaining the MENA paradox: Rising educational attainment yet stagnant female labor force participation
Volume 43 - Article 28    | Keywords: employment, female labor force participation, human capital, labor market, Middle East, North Africa

Ready for parenthood? Dual earners' relative labour market positions and entry into parenthood in Belgium
Volume 42 - Article 33    | Keywords: Belgium, couple perspective, couples, first birth, gender, labor market, relative labor market characteristics