Leaving the parental home during the COVID-19 pandemic: the case of Southern Europe.

Autor: Ferraretto, Valeria, Vitali, Agnese, Billari, Francesco C.
Zdroj: Advances in Life Course Research; Mar2024, Vol. 59, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Abstrakt: In 2020, COVID-19-related governmental restrictions forced individuals to radically change their habits, possibly impacting on their living arrangements. Whether COVID-19 affected young adults' propensity to leave the parental home is still unknown; Southern Europe is of particular interest, as youth experience the "latest-late" transition to adulthood, face uncertainty in the labor market, and receive low welfare support. Using EU-SILC longitudinal data from Greece, Spain, Italy, and Portugal, this study examines how home-leaving rates evolved in the short-term and explores the relationship between governmental restrictions, economic characteristics of households and young adults, and leaving home behaviors. Descriptive analyses reveal that the share of young adults leaving the parental home in Southern Europe between 2019 and 2020 slightly increased compared to previous years. Discrete-time event history models show that the propensity to leave the parental home increases with the stringency of policy measures. Young adults with the highest likelihood to leave home are employed individuals whose households are in the lowest income quintile as well as students from the highest income quintile, suggesting that, in these countries, residential independence is associated with either the acquisition of economic resources in the labor market or the availability of family resources. We interpret this result in favor of an "independence effect" exerted by COVID-19-related restrictions on young adults; future research might establish whether this trend is temporary or persistent over time. • Young adults exposed to similar conditions in Spain, Italy, Greece, and Portugal. • We apply survival models to EU-SILC data 2017-2020 and Oxford stringency index. • Stringent policies associated with an increased probability to leave home in 2020. • In Southern Europe, we interpret this result as an "independence effect". • Young adults' and their households' economic resources are key determinants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Supplemental Index