Volume 51 - Article 23 | Pages 723–762  

The transition to adulthood in Europe at the intersection of gender and parental socioeconomic status

By Valeria Ferraretto, Agnese Vitali

Abstract

Background: In Europe, the transition to adulthood has been steadily prolonged. Comparative studies have not addressed in detail the role of parental socioeconomic status (SES) and gender in the postponement of events linked to the transition to adulthood.

Objective: Our aim is to evaluate whether the timing and the risk of experiencing home-leaving, labour market entry, first coresidential union, and first birth vary by gender and parental SES, while also considering variation across successive birth cohorts and country groups.

Methods: We rely on data from two rounds (2006, 2018) of the European Social Survey, including key retrospective questions on the timing of events for individuals born in the 1950s–1990s and living in 31 European countries. Non-parametric techniques and discrete-time event history models are used to model each event separately. Analyses are stratified by country group.

Results: Results indicate that across Europe, high parental SES is positively associated with delayed labour market entry, union formation, and childbearing; the association with leaving the parental home is positive in Western and Northern Europe and negative or null in Eastern and Southern Europe. Women are more likely to experience all transitions before men, except for the first job, and this gap persists among younger generations. Gender differences are, however, substantially reduced among individuals with high-SES parents.

Contribution: The paper contributes to the comparative literature on the transition to adulthood by focusing substantively on the intersection between gender and parental background and on the timing of events.

Author's Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

Retraditionalisation? Work patterns of families with children during the pandemic in Italy
Volume 45 - Article 31

Unpacking intentions to leave the parental home in Europe using the Generations and Gender Survey
Volume 45 - Article 2

Using Twitter data for demographic research
Volume 37 - Article 46

Who brings home the bacon? The influence of context on partners' contributions to the household income
Volume 35 - Article 41

Youth prospects in a time of economic recession
Volume 29 - Article 36

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research

Is single parenthood increasingly an experience of less-educated mothers? A European comparison over five decades
Volume 51 - Article 34    | Keywords: age, children, cross-national comparison, education, Europe, family life course, inequality, single motherhood

Transitions to adulthood in men and women in rural Malawi in the 21st century using sequence analysis: Some evidence of delay
Volume 51 - Article 14    | Keywords: Africa, Health and Demographic Surveillance System, longitudinal analysis, Malawi, sequence analysis, transition to adulthood

Trajectories of US parents’ divisions of domestic labor throughout the COVID-19 pandemic
Volume 51 - Article 12    | Keywords: childcare, COVID-19, division of labor, fathers, gender, housework, mothers

Are highly educated partners really more gender egalitarian? A couple-level analysis of social class differentials in attitudes and behaviors
Volume 50 - Article 34    | Keywords: attitudes, couple analysis, education, educational level, gender, gender roles, housework, social class differentials

The intergenerational transmission of migration capital: The role of family migration history and lived migration experiences
Volume 50 - Article 29    | Keywords: childhood, emigration, Europe, immigration, life course