From Ireland to Croatia, young people say well-paid jobs not enough in a system stacked against their generation
Ireland has recorded a steep rise in young adults living with their parents over the pandemic and amid its acute housing crisis. Between 2017 and 2022 – the most recent year data is available for – the proportion of working 25- to 34-year-olds living with their parents rose from 27% to 40%, according to analysis by the EU agency Eurofound.
Barcelona has long been in the spotlight for its backlash against over-tourism, with slogans such as ‘Tourists go home’ daubed on walls, and more recently, rents are reported to have risen in neighbourhoods popular with digital nomads with earning power exceeding local salaries.
I understand that the US housing crisis is due to single family zoning and investment firms sitting on empty houses, but what is causing the EU crisis?
From the various EU countries I lived in, I would say it’s a mix of:
This has affected poorer EU nations as much as richer ones, so somebody’s suggestion that it’s to do with freedom of movement is the same kind of nonsense I heard from Brexiters in the UK: my native Portugal has a massive housing bubble even though things are so bad that the country loses half of its university graduates every year to emigration, which together with all the rest means almost 200k people leaving every year (edit: out of a population of around 10 million, so 2%), and yet the average age at which a young adult in Portugal leaves their parent’s home is now 34 years old. Literally decades of Government measures incentivising house price increases (from a refusal to properly regulate conversions of residential units into AirBnBs and actual incentives for rich foreigners to invest in PT property by giving out Golden Visas in exchange for such investments, to a complete collapse in the building of social housing by the State) are exacerbating a brain drain as well as making the population aging problem worse since even those who stay have children later and have fewer of them because the insane costs of housing mean they can’t afford to have children earlier or more than 1.
Politicians in the current political system love rising house prices because, due to the way GDP is calculated using an Inflation metric that understates the effects of house price inflation, house prices going up translates to a higher Official GDP figure - I.e. GDP “Growth” - which is politically treated as representing an improvement for the country and the people in it.
I would say that the root cause of the problem is Neoliberalism as well as crooked politicians who themselves are high middle-class or wealthier, hence housing investors, hence gain directly from doing all they can to prop-up housing prices.
Sounds similar, from the details in the article. Same thing happening to Canada, too.
Can confirm. It’s not just young people either. The elderly, disabled, and anyone who can’t find good employment that pays properly. Based on the latest census data for my city, that’s like over half of the jobs people have.
The only way you get ahead is if you have multiple people(in a household) working jobs that pay well above the median salary, which are (I’m guessing here) probably about 40% of the jobs and the ones that require far more experience than most people actually have.
I’ve been trying to hang on for the past couple years but we’re likely going to have to sell our home. Which in a way is good because the upkeep is too much for my parents and I to handle. But I’m nervous we might end up in a worse situation down the line because of it all.
I was all angry about it being called an EU crisis, but it seems that free movement of people is a factor in this.