Image Courtesy Of Rusty Watson On Unsplash
Only a third of adults in the United States did not rely on their parents for some form of material support between their late teens and early 40s, research finds.
This article was written by Matt Shipman and originally published by NC State and Futurity.
The study highlights the extent to which parents and adult children rely on each other for financial assistance or a place to live well into the children’s adult years and challenges popular conventions and expectations about adulthood.
“This work really challenges the notion that complete independence is a necessary marker of adulthood,” says Anna Manzoni, coauthor of the study and an associate professor of sociology at North Carolina State University. “Instead, we see a pattern of interdependency that changes over time and appears to be influenced by race and educational background.”
For the study, researchers analyzed data on 14,675 US adults who participated in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, focusing on data collected from study participants between the ages of 18 and 43.
Specifically, the researchers looked at various ways in which these adults exchanged financial and residential support with their parents over time, as well as various social and demographic factors, such as gender, race/ethnicity, and parents’ educational background.
“We found that there is no single pathway that most people take regarding independence from their parents,” Manzoni says. “Instead, people tend to fall into one of six different categories.”
The researchers call these categories “pathways of intergenerational support”:
“We also found that these pathways are not evenly distributed across the population,” Manzoni says. “For example, Complete Independence is least likely among Black families and most likely among white families, while Extended Interdependence is least likely among white families and most likely among Hispanic families.
“Educational background also appears to be a significant factor. For example, people whose parents completed less than a high school education are far more likely to experience the Extended Interdependence pathway, while people whose parents completed a graduate or professional degree are significantly more likely to experience the Complete Independence pathway.
“Ultimately, the work drives home the extent to which access to resources and structural restraints—such as access to education—influence which pathways to independence people have access to. It also makes clear that we need to reevaluate how we think of independence and adulthood, given that only a third of study participants were able to take the Complete Independence pathway that is often presented as being the norm.”
The paper appears in Sociological Perspectives.
Source: NC State
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