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Opinion: Young Americans going nowhere


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By Todd G. Buchholz and Victoria Buchholz

Americans are supposed to be mobile and even pushy. Saul Bellow’s Augie March declares, “I am an American … first to knock, first admitted.” In “The Grapes of Wrath,” young Tom Joad loads up his jalopy with pork snacks and relatives, and the family flees the Oklahoma dust bowl for sun-kissed California. Along the way, Granma dies, but the Joads keep going.

But sometime in the past 30 years, someone has hit the brakes and Americans — particularly young Americans — have become risk-averse and sedentary. The timing is terrible. With an 8.3 percent unemployment rate and a foreclosure rate that would grab the attention of the Joads, young Americans are less inclined to pack up and move to sunnier economic climes.

The likelihood of 20-somethings moving to another state has dropped well over 40 percent since the 1980s, according to calculations based on Census Bureau data. The stuck-at-home mentality hits college-educated Americans as well as those without high school degrees. According to the Pew Research Center, the proportion of young adults living at home nearly doubled between 1980 and 2008, before the Great Recession hit. Even bicycle sales are lower now than they were in 2000. Today’s generation is literally going nowhere. This is the Occupy movement we should really be worried about.

For about $200, young Nevadans who face a statewide 13 percent jobless rate can hop a Greyhound bus to North Dakota, where they’ll find a welcome sign and a 3.3 percent rate. Why are young people not crossing borders? “This generation is going through an economic reset,” said John Della Volpe, who directs polling at Harvard’s Institute of Politics, which surveys thousands of young people each year. He reports that young people want to stay more connected with their hometowns: “I spoke with a kid from Columbus, Ohio, who dreamed of being a high school teacher. When he found out he’d have to move to Arizona or the Sunbelt, he took a job in a Columbus tire factory.”

In the most startling behavioral change among young people since James Dean and Marlon Brando started mumbling, an increasing number of teenagers are not even bothering to get their driver’s licenses. Back in the early 1980s, 80 percent of 18-year-olds proudly strutted out of the D.M.V. with newly minted licenses, according to a study by researchers at the University of Michigan’s Transportation Research Institute. By 2008 — even before the Great Recession — that number had dropped to 65 percent. Though it’s easy to blame the high cost of cars or gasoline, Comerica Bank’s Automobile Affordability Index shows that it takes fewer weeks of work income to buy a car today than in the early 1980s, and inflation-adjusted gasoline prices didn’t get out of line until a few years ago.

Todd G. Buchholz is the author of “Rush: Why You Need and Love the Rat Race.” Victoria Buchholz, a student at Cambridge University, is at work on a book about the neuropsychology of the teenage brain.

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Comments (4)
  1. Lisa says - Posted: April 2, 2012

    I think we are also seeing the result of all the “helicopter” parenting that has been occurring for a generation. If parents don’t teach their kids to think for themselves and solve their own problems (when it is age appropriate way for different problems), they will always see the world as a big scary place and not be able to strike out on their own.

  2. Careaboutthecommunity says - Posted: April 2, 2012

    They want to stay close to home, because that’s where the handouts are?

    Parents cling to their kids nowadays, so they highly discourage them from leaving?

  3. Citizen Kane says - Posted: April 3, 2012

    its funny, I wanted to comment on the relationship of this trend and staying close to handouts from mom and dad – and two folks beat me to it!!…yes, I would wager the above commenters are over 40 (and so is this one) and yes, today’s parents have no one to blame but themselves for creating dependent kids. I even see it within siblings from the same family, where the younger ones are “hand fed” till over 30, and still rely on parents for support – and ironically as the parents get older, such kids seem least inclinded to want to help out their own parents! I guess this stuff flip flops every generation: cut off early, no not my kids, then next generation over pampered and selfish. I guess we sow what we reap!

  4. Hangs Ups From Way Back says - Posted: April 3, 2012

    People try to put us d-down (Talkin’ ’bout my generation)
    Just because we g-g-get around (Talkin’ ’bout my generation)
    Things they do look awful c-c-cold (Talkin’ ’bout my generation)
    I hope I die before I get old (Talkin’ ’bout my generation)

    Go be what you want be,by the time you come down ,your too damn old to have fun,so “Just do it.”