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Gen Y Not Slackers, Just Slow Starters

LiveScience.com livescience.com Thu Mar 24, 12:41 pm ET

Generation Y is often thought of as a slacker group of young adults who have

failed to launch, delaying real careers and families until later in life. But

new research suggests their heavy dependence on Mom and Dad might ultimately

prepare them to be successful adults.

Specifically, the study found this generation of "emerging adults" turns to

parental support in times of difficultly and as a way to advance their careers

in a job market geared toward the highly educated, though most are weaned from

such support by their early 30s.

"On a general level, people have concerns about young adults being more

dependent than their parents' or grandparents' generations," said researcher

Teresa Swartz of the University of Minnesota.

In the mid-20th century, most parents could safely assume their children would

be full-fledged adults by their mid 20s, economically stable with their own

homes and families. Five decades later, half of twentysomethings are still

supported by their parents in some capacity at age 24, the study shows.

"People know that it is a challenge to be a young adult and start off your

adult life today," Swartz said. "It's taking longer to find their job and move

out of their parental home."

A 2009 survey by the Pew Research Center found that 13 percent of parents with

grown children say an adult son or daughter had moved back home over the past

year for various reasons, including the recession, with most so-called

"boomerangers" in the 18 to 34 age group.

The new data came from the Youth Development Study, a survey of young adults.

The study has followed a group of ninth-grade students enrolled in St. Paul,

Minn., public schools in the fall of 1987; the students and their parents

filled out questionnaires every year or two. Swartz analyzed data from 1997,

when the participants were 24 years old, through 2005, when they turned 32.

"We were interested in this older period of young adulthood," Swartz told

LiveScience. "What defines this giving? Why do they give?"

Most of these parentally dependent twentysomethings have launched into

adulthood by their 30s, only about 15 percent still receiving aid of some kind

from their parents, the results showed.

Much of this parental support can be thought of in terms of scaffolding, "to

build the autonomy or independence of their young adult children," Swartz said.

"Parents were more likely to give if the young adult was engaged in building

their skills or educational potential, so they would be more marketable when

they enter the job market."

In an economy that is more and more dependent on a highly educated work force,

the extra years spent attaining higher-level degrees or pursuing low-paid

internships and part-time employment can add much to advance a young adult's

career, she said.

"With the current recession, people are realizing it's not a matter of

discipline or maturity, it's more a matter of labor and housing market. It's

quite different than their grandparents' generation," Swartz said. "But, young

people eventually get there."

Parents also gave in times of their adult children's need, such as during

unemployment, divorce or death of a spouse, stepping in to act as a safety net

in times of trouble. This aid often came in the form of housing support,

opening the doors of their homes to their young adult children.

The study was published in the April 2011 issue of the Journal of Marriage and

Family.

You can follow LiveScience staff writer Jennifer Welsh on Twitter

@microbelover.