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Census: Recession Turning Young Adults Into Lost Generation

Young Adults

HOPE YEN   09/23/11 12:57 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Young adults are the recession's lost generation.

In record numbers, they're struggling to find work, shunning long-distance moves to live with mom and dad, delaying marriage and raising kids out of wedlock, if they're becoming parents at all. The unemployment rate for them is the highest since World War II, and they risk living in poverty more than others – nearly 1 in 5.

New 2010 census data released Thursday show the wrenching impact of a recession that officially ended in mid-2009. There are missed opportunities and dim prospects for a generation of mostly 20-somethings and 30-somethings coming of age in a prolonged period of joblessness.

"We have a monster jobs problem, and young people are the biggest losers," said Andrew Sum, an economist and director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University. He noted that for recent college graduates getting by on waitressing, bartending and odd jobs, they will have to compete with new graduates for entry-level career positions when the job market does improve.

"Their really high levels of underemployment and unemployment will haunt young people for at least another decade," Sum said.

Richard Freeman, an economist at Harvard University, said young people "will be scarred and they will be called the `lost generation' – in that their careers would not be the same way if we had avoided this economic disaster."

The latest figures also show a rebound in the foreign-born population to 40 million, or 12.9 percent, the highest share since 1920. The 1.4 million increase from 2009 was the biggest since the mid-decade housing boom and could fuel debate in this election season about immigration strategy.

Most immigrants continue to be low-skilled workers from Latin America, with growing numbers from Asia also arriving. An estimated 11.2 million people are in the U.S. illegally.

People age 65 and older tended to return to or stay in their jobs, accounting for the few employment gains in recent months. About 1 in 6 older people is now in the labor force. That's the highest level since the 1960s, before more generous Social Security and Medicare benefits made it more attractive to retire.

Employment among young adults 16-29 was 55.3 percent, compared with 67.3 percent in 2000; it's the lowest since the end of World War II.

Young males who lacked a college degree were most likely to lose jobs due to reduced demand for blue-collar jobs in construction, manufacturing and transportation during the downturn. Among teenagers, employment was less than 30 percent.

The employment-to-population ratio for all age groups from 2007-2010 dropped faster than for any similar period since the government began tracking the data in 1948. In the past year, 43 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas continued to post declines in employment: Charlotte, N.C., Jacksonville, Fla., Las Vegas, Phoenix, Los Angeles and Detroit. Each experienced a severe housing bust, budget deficit or meltdown in industries such as banking or manufacturing.

Without work, young adults aren't starting careers and lives in new cities.

Among adults 18-34, the share of long-distance moves across state lines fell last year to roughly 3.2 million people, or 4.4 percent, the lowest level since World War II. For college graduates, who historically are more likely to relocate out of state, long-distance moves dipped to 2.4 percent.

Opting to stay put, roughly 5.9 million Americans 25-34 last year lived with their parents, an increase of 25 percent from before the recession. Driven by a record 1 in 5 young men who doubled up in households, men are now nearly twice as likely as women to live with their parents.

Marriages fell to a record low last year of just 51.4 percent among adults 18 and over, compared with 57 percent in 2000. Among young adults 25-34, marriage was at 44.2 percent, also a new low.

Broken down by race and ethnicity, 31 percent of young black men lived in their parents' homes, compared with 21 percent of young Latino men and 15 percent of young white men. At the state level, New York had the highest share of young men living with their parents at 21 percent, followed by New Jersey and Hawaii, all states with higher costs of living. Most of the cities with low percentages of young adults living at home were in the Midwest.

Younger women across all race and ethnic groups had fewer children compared with 2008. Births declined 6 percent among 20-34 year-olds over the two-year period even though the number of women in this group increased by more than 1 million, according to an analysis of census data by Kenneth Johnson, sociology professor and senior demographer at the University of New Hampshire. Never before has such a drop in births occurred when the population of young adults increased in at least 15 years.

"Are people just delaying births, or does this represent a real loss of babies that won't be replaced? During the Great Depression, there was a permanent loss of births – they were never made up," Johnson said.

Homeownership declined for a fourth consecutive year, to 65.4 percent, following a peak of 67.3 percent in 2006.

"Many young adults are essentially postponing adulthood and all of the family responsibilities and extra costs that go along with it," said Mark Mather, an associate vice president at the private Population Reference Bureau. He described a shift toward a new U.S. norm, one that's commonly seen in Europe, in which more people wait until their 30s to leave the parental nest.

"Some of these changes started before the recession but now they are accelerating, with effects on families that could be long term," Mather said.

The District of Columbia plus 14 states had the largest ratios of college graduates to high-school dropouts, more than 3 to 1. Several of these places, including the District of Columbia and states with larger immigrant populations, had the widest income gaps between rich and poor.

The number of Hispanic children in poverty rose by half a million to 6.1 million last year, making up a majority of the increase in total child poverty. Hispanics now comprise 37 percent of children in poverty, compared with 30 percent for whites and 27 percent for blacks.

"We are really at a crossroads," said William H. Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution. "These new young immigrants and their children need a pathway to the middle class – good educations, affordable housing and jobs – at the same time federal and state budgets are strapped for funds. While we face tough choices, the quality of our future labor force depends on meeting their needs."

Other census findings:

_About 1 in 4 families with children is headed by single mothers, a record. Among young families with a head of household younger than 30, the poverty rate jumped from 30 percent in 2007 to 37 percent. In contrast, poverty remained at a low 5.7 percent for families with a head of household 65 or older.

_The number of households receiving food stamps swelled by 2 million to 13.6 million, meaning that nearly 1 in 8 receives the government aid. Among households receiving food stamps, more than half have children.

The 2010 numbers are from the American Community Survey, which queries 3 million households. In some cases, figures are supplemented with data from the Current Population Survey to establish historical trends.

___

Online:

http://www.census.gov

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WASHINGTON — Young adults are the recession's lost generation. In record numbers, they're struggling to find work, shunning long-distance moves to live with mom and dad, delaying marriage and r...
WASHINGTON — Young adults are the recession's lost generation. In record numbers, they're struggling to find work, shunning long-distance moves to live with mom and dad, delaying marriage and r...
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03:45 PM on 09/27/2011
Why does everyone play the blame game? This is why nothing gets done. Everyone just blames each other and never tries to come up with an intelligent and reasonable solution. It is no single persons blame, its is a collective of people.
09:04 PM on 09/25/2011
The global society is very controlling. For many years they have cut employment opportunities, benefits and salaries.
Who are they to decide what someone is worth?
They have not made this into a society that is a better place to live and with enough opportunity for all.
They have nickel and dimed people until there is no nickel and dime left to steal.
Now all of the elite sit in bewilderment-searching for answers from each other and they have none.

Soon even the rich will suffer-nice master plan.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chris2fer
Voting is like driving R for backward D is forward
11:31 AM on 09/25/2011
I encounter them all the time, out of gas, either walking up the road with a gas can or at the station asking for money
10:12 AM on 09/25/2011
Long story short. Old people's stock portfolios wiped out, old people need money and thus keep working, and young people lose out on jobs to old people and are thus shafted.
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Flavor
Change Is Now
02:06 PM on 09/24/2011
This is why (change) has got to occur, we tell our youth to go to college & then in turn they graduate to find that they cannot find a job in their field available for them. Now, remember they have to start paying two some three student loans back & how can they do this. It appears maybe (Americans) may have to think about not moving to another American state but to China. I'm just sayin!!!!!!
03:39 PM on 09/27/2011
What a bad comment. That is the last thing Americans need to do. We need to revamp our Public Education system, and focus more on education of the youth. Also having the economy better would help.
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democrats for life
republicans need not apply
09:48 AM on 09/24/2011
i've bee saying all along Bush created 20 years of damage and a lost generation
04:13 PM on 09/24/2011
If not entirely, he sure pitched in. I don't see how anyone could argue that.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
05:11 PM on 09/24/2011
Started with Reagan.
10:06 AM on 09/25/2011
I often am bemused by the intellects on display here. There is an underpinning of a conspiracy behind every failure. I'm not aware of what your fields of study are/were (how could I be?) ,but you seem to be what Gingrich called 'the semi' or pseudo educated". I don't think life is going to be very pleasant if you cling to your delusions rather than developing a critical thought pattern
Corwin. Only being cruel because it's Kind
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onegandolf1
08:30 AM on 09/24/2011
And a bunch of them are with over 1000 others outside The N.Y. Stock Exchange , protesting this. Problem is, just as the thousands who protested outside The White House two weeks ago (over 100 arrests) the MSM is ignoring it.

If it was a dozen folks dressed up as Ben Franklin protesting in Podunk, Utah, it would be all over the News !
04:07 PM on 09/24/2011
Don't forget, you've got to strap on an AK-47 for your "peaceful" protest. It's not a scare-tactic, though.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
05:14 PM on 09/24/2011
We gun toting liberals need to have our own protest. I'm NRA, great shot, and believe citizens have the right to arm themselves. I do find the public display of weapons to be unwise though.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
05:17 PM on 09/24/2011
We should. The Locke liberal founders fought the Burke conservative 1000 richest families and their multinational British Empire, to create the Democratic Republic, the USA, and so many people now vote for the conservative Tories who want to bring back the rule by the super rich. The hated the banksters.

James Madison 
"History records that the money changers have used every form of abuse, intrigue, deceit, and violent means possible to maintain their control over government­­s by controllin­­g money and it's issuance."

"When economic power became concentrat­­ed in a few hands, then political power flowed to those possessors and away from the citizens, ultimately resulting in an oligarchy or tyranny." John Adams

"As riches increase and accumulate in few hands . . . the tendency of things will be to depart from the republican standard." Alexander Hamilton

"I hope we shall . . . crush in [its] birth the aristocrac­­y of our monied corporatio­­ns." Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson
"I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies.
Already they have raised up a monied aristocracy that has set the government at defiance. The
issuing power (of money) should be taken away from the banks and restored to the people to
whom it properly belongs." — Thomas Jefferson, U.S. President.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onegandolf1
05:35 PM on 09/24/2011
Youould check out a YouTube Video called "The Secret of Oz". I don''t seem to have the link bookmarked or I would provide it, but if you Google it I'm sure you'll find it.
08:23 AM on 09/24/2011
These young were Obama's base that were duped with a cute slogan of Hope and Change. The Lib media sold them on how great this clown was and now they are paying the price. They should rename this generation the Hope and Changers.
07:30 AM on 09/24/2011
"Employment among young adults between the ages of 16 to 29 was at its lowest levels since the end of World War II. Just 55 percent were employed, compared with 67 percent in 2000.”
This is a shame on our society. We have failed to provide this generation with the environment and the opportunity to get jobs, to earn and have the necessities of life and to have respect from society. It appears the older generation also needs education, because it is us who have put them in this situation, and we should not forget it!
A solution by politicians is likely to be superficial and ephemeral. Enduring educational and sociological answers to the problems of the younger generation are needed to be found and set into operation e.g. by world-wide “people for people think tanks” to find ways to provide the right environment where everyone is cared for. Where education focuses more on acceptance and compassion for differences between peoples – with the prime focus being that each one of us is a person who must be given the opportunity to work, have sufficient food, a place to live, have a family, and most of all to be given, if not the compassion and love of others, at least their respect.
To provide the basic humanitarian needs to everyone must be the aim of any society which wants to call itself “civilised”.
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Nick9075
11:06 AM on 09/23/2011
Younger people have many more options ---- they can get more education in another field or go back to school. Someone who is in their mid 30's & older doesn't have this option or it is seen as 'weird' and looked at as a bad period of unemployment.

Seems like the only people getting hired are under 30 because as recruiters say they have 'less baggage' likely DO NOT have bad credit, no unexplained job hopping, are more 'fun to be around' etc.. Employers are much more forgiving about Resume gaps or a period unemployment for this younger set that HP, USATODAY &CNN loves to post bleeding heart articles about.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
06:26 PM on 09/23/2011
There just aren't enough jobs. Period.
10:14 AM on 09/25/2011
Gander,
I'm in a health care field (Well, a doc.) I received a job offer this summer from a clinic in SD. I make what you would think is a lot of money now. The offer was for a little over 100 K /yr more.The u.p rate in the state is 1.8-2.2 % Now, I'm very,very good at what I do.And I have diverse skills.But,Calif isn't offering jobs I was offered a job at an Illinois group,and was told by one of the docs,the state is collapsing . I assume you're a Liberal Arts major,but has it penetrated that upholstered skull that there is a difference between certain geographic areas and the local economy ? Why is that?
One of my favorite authors is the sci fi/fantasy Grand Master Jack Vance. In, "The The Green Pearl, a character tells her brother,"Change utterly." It's a statement you should ponder
04:10 PM on 09/24/2011
No, we have no options. We can't get education without getting even -more- in debt, and as it stands there's not enough jobs for all the diploma-holding unemployed right now anyway.

Not to say it's not just as hard on the older people, but either way, with this job market, your odds are shot as it is. To say who has the slightly better odds is just splitting hairs at this point.
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antipodal2u
Just say NO to hypocrisy
10:04 AM on 09/23/2011
All part of the republicant plan. Indentured servive for a generation of lost people
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nick9075
11:09 AM on 09/23/2011
Sure, I am positive you got that from CNN or lifting it from a USA TODAY editorial piece. Is that why Obama forced health insurers to cover people to age 26 under parents policies and expanded the maximum student loan limit to infinity at where the interest is subsidized by the taxpayer?
11:14 AM on 09/23/2011
Actually, the banks charged higher student loan interest rates and YES, the taxpayers were on the hook to underwrite those loans. Time afer time I find conservatives locked into their mindset based on false beliefs. As for insurance? Would you rather have your LOCAL taxes and your personal insurance premiums increased in order to cover ER (the most expensive) care for uninsured young people? Please, just go through the steps to logical conclusions.
04:12 PM on 09/24/2011
I hope Obama forces health insurers to walk off a cliff for all the "good" health insurance companies do. They get rich, they don't heal people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Scott Leland
01:43 PM on 09/23/2011
It is not right for any group of Americans to be a "lost generation." The U.S.' economic problems are being caused by the corporations:

http://www.flixya.com/blog/3201910/Beautiful-Butterflys
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Flavor
Change Is Now
04:24 AM on 09/23/2011
There are more people in the United States but not enough working to take care of the mass that aren't. Right now the medical field, electronics, ect... is where one should be venturing towards. I keep saying things won't be like they were 10 years ago, long gone.
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judi9694
04:53 PM on 09/23/2011
Yeah, sure, the medical field and electronics and most of those jobs require education, some tinges significant education and you can't bank all the jobs in one field. As you know that is a horrible investment plan and rarely succeeds. Never put all your eggs in one basket. The US needs diversity in commerce. Like it or not, we need manufacturing. Like it or not, we have to work for less. Like it or not, if the US won't, China, Mexico, India, and other such countries will, they are. And no it will never be the same again. In fact, America is dying on the vine. During the depression there was something to look forward to, but nothing here. We are going down.
03:58 AM on 09/23/2011
"Are people just delaying births, or does this represent a real loss of babies that won't be replaced? During the Great Depression, there was a permanent loss of births – they were never made up," Johnson said.

If women in this age group increased by 1 million, they ARE replacing the babies that aren't born. What's the problem? And who said these women are going to stay childless?
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Alethea
Have the courage to use reason.
04:04 PM on 09/23/2011
I waited 5 years to have my first kid because I didn't want to be so financially unstable. It was a good thing too because I got laid off back in Aug 08. Being unemployed was miserable enough, but also feel extra inadequate because I wouldn't have been able to provide for my child? That would have been too much to handle.

When I was 25 ish, I wanted 3 kids. Now that I'm 30 I just have one and am seriously considering stopping here. 3 kids is definitely out of the question. 2 is looking bleaker by the day.

I just don't see how I can give my daughter a quality life (good school, college education, and pay for my OWN retirement) if I have to split the funds in half.

It's sad, but it's reality. And for others in my age group? They are coming to similar conclusions. It's just practical.
06:28 PM on 09/23/2011
If only everyone else is as responsible as you are, we wouldn't have the kind of single mother poverty rates and problematic foster children in this country. I'm sure your daughter will appreciate and benefit from the focus you are giving her.
09:05 PM on 09/22/2011
I'm not sure who is running the country but I know who isn't.
09:02 PM on 09/22/2011
Combined with this problem of graduating without a job is the lack of a conversation about money. You may become accustomed to a lifestyle in college that you simply can't reasonably (or don't necessarily know how to properly) support. This video speaks a lot to getting Millennials involved in their own financial discussion:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7h8da8X0pEM

-Danny @ LifeTuner
barbra1971
Sherry Hunt my hero
12:40 AM on 09/23/2011
I think they need jobs not discussion. We can talk about money when we have chance to earn income, otherwise there is nothing to talk about.

Your idea applies only to those who have less income then before. Without job there is no INCOME, period. How do you save 10% from zero?
11:22 AM on 09/23/2011
You make the point that young people do need to discuss money. IF out of work people HAD saved 10% when they WERE working, they'd have more options if they lost their jobs -- like NOT having to ask their parents to support them.