How soon does multigenerational living in the US become the norm? It feels like our reasons will be more economical than some cultural shift, when will it be common enough that it's just excepted the way it's excepted culturally in so many other countries?
Older populations with zero savings are going to have trouble aging in place without their kid's help due to cost of elder-care and trouble affording nursing or retirement homes. Young people won't be able to afford to live on their own unless home prices plummet and rent prices retract/stallAND/OR wages rise significantly.
Food and healthcare aren't going to get much cheaper. And savings from being cheap on public transpo or entertainment aren't enough to move the needle for many people.
In 1971 (with help of Social Security and Medicare and other economic factors), the share of older Americans living in multigenerational households was down to 9%. I think that has doubled. And since the late 60's the number of people 18-29 yr old living back at home has almost doubled from 25% to nearly 50.
But living at home as a young person still isn't viewed as "ideal" or "normal". And I know plenty of people who don't want their in-laws or parents living with them. I think we're just a decade or two away.
Older populations with zero savings are going to have trouble aging in place without their kid's help due to cost of elder-care and trouble affording nursing or retirement homes. Young people won't be able to afford to live on their own unless home prices plummet and rent prices retract/stallAND/OR wages rise significantly.
Food and healthcare aren't going to get much cheaper. And savings from being cheap on public transpo or entertainment aren't enough to move the needle for many people.
In 1971 (with help of Social Security and Medicare and other economic factors), the share of older Americans living in multigenerational households was down to 9%. I think that has doubled. And since the late 60's the number of people 18-29 yr old living back at home has almost doubled from 25% to nearly 50.
But living at home as a young person still isn't viewed as "ideal" or "normal". And I know plenty of people who don't want their in-laws or parents living with them. I think we're just a decade or two away.