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Displaying ROOF Blog articles tagged with Young People

One in five of ‘boomerang generation’ graduates live at home

09/12/2009

Author:
Renata Watson

Research from the Office for National Statistics shows that almost one in five graduates in their late twenties now live with their parents.

By contrast, only one in eight university graduates had failed to fly the nest by the same age 20 years ago.

Rising property prices, mounting student debts and the effects of recession on the job market have forced a wave of young people to move back into the family home at an age when they would normally be moving out.

The research suggests that young people in Britain are twice as likely to live with their parents in their late twenties than their counterparts elsewhere in Europe.

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Country ‘in denial’ over housing supply

08/07/2009

Author:
AJ Williamson

According to the latest National Housing Planning and Advice Unit’s survey on housing, attitudes to new housing developments need to change ‘as a matter of urgency’. More than half of current homeowners (51 per cent) would object to new housing being built in their area, despite continuing home affordability issues where as many as 90 per cent of young people cannot afford an average first-time buyer’s house. By comparison less than a third of non-homeowners (31 per cent) would object. Despite the average house price fall of 22 per cent, almost nine out of ten young people cannot afford to buy an averagely priced first-time home.

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Binge drinking raises risk of homelessness

02/07/2009

Author:
AJ Williamson

A Salvation Army report has warned a generation of young people are binge drinking to such an extent they are at risk of social exclusion and homelessness. The report, Seeds of Exclusion 2009, says it is concerned for a new generation of young homeless adults who appear to be self-medicating with drugs and alcohol. Relationship breakdown and lack of supportive relationships are cited as the main reasons for homelessness. However, the research indicated that 59 per cent of those questioned reported an alcohol addiction, rising to 66 per cent among the 18- to 25-year-olds.

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Student grants to be frozen

02/07/2009

Author:
AJ Williamson

The government has announced that financial support to students will be frozen next year because of ‘difficult economic times’. The decision has been described as a ‘kick in the teeth’ for young people who argue the cap in grants and loans represented a real term cut and would increase student debt level.

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‘Drop outs’ will top 1 million

01/07/2009

Author:
AJ Williamson

The number of young people not in employment, education and training (neets) is expected to total one million by September research by the Local Government Association has found. Much earlier intervention is needed to identify young people who are at risk of dropping out and councils should be allowed to fund employment or training projects, the LGA says.

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Young excluded from home ownership

08/06/2009

Author:
AJ Williamson

Fewer young people are living independently than ten years ago, and more households in the private rented sector are headed by young people aged 16-24 than in owner occupation and social housing combined, according to a study by the Chartered Institute of Housing (CIH). Young people say that they are excluded from home ownership and shared ownership because the costs are too high for them to meet.

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Relax planning for multi-generational living

05/06/2009

Author:
AJ Williamson

Planning laws should be relaxed to make it easier for families to add accommodation to their homes for elderly relatives, Relationship Foundation, a social thinktank has said. The organisation says the rising number of pensioners, falling pensions, higher child care costs and a depressed housing market mean that more people are living with relatives than ever. It is also keen to see social housing bodies build more multi-generational homes. Recent research found that 500,000 homes in Britain are occupied by several generations of the one family.

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Council acted wrongly in referring child to homeless unit

04/06/2009

Author:
AJ Williamson

The House of Lords upheld a Court of Appeal decision that a local authority’s children’s service unit had not fulfilled its duty of care to a homeless child, just by referring him to a homeless person’s unit. The claimant had presented himself to Southwark council’s children’s services department asking for urgent assessment under section 17 of the Children Act 1989 and immediate accommodation under section 20(1). The assessment initially concluded that, as he was 17 and not in fulltime education, accommodation provided by the homeless person’s unit was sufficient.

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Deprived parts of Wales see few economic gains

03/06/2009

Author:
AJ Williamson

Economic gains in deprived parts of Wales in the past 10 years have been wiped out by the recession, and worse is still to come. A report by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation and New Policy Institute found that, compared with other parts of the UK, economic recovery since 1997 was slower to kick in and markedly weaker, with the danger of further deterioration as the recession continues. Unemployment stood at 6 per cent, but increased to 16 per cent among the 16- to 24-year-olds.

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Young people suffering brunt of recession

26/05/2009

Author:
AJ Williamson

Research by the Prince’s Trust show that deprived young people are being hit by the recession worst, and more is to come. Claims for jobseeker’s allowance by 18- to-24-year-olds have risen by more than 80 per cent in the past year, totalling more than 450,000 young people. At the same time, youth charities are facing increasing demand for their services, and a drop in income as the recession hits the value of investments.

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