Leaving home in the Netherlands: Timing and first housing
Publication date
2002
Authors
Mulder, C.H.
Hooimeijer, P.
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Successive birth cohorts have left the parental home at an accelerating pace in the
early post-war decades in the Netherlands. A second trend, starting later but lasting longer, is
that people increasingly leave the parental home to live alone. Both trends have had implications
for the housing market as they contributed to the continuation of the housing shortage
and generated a shift in the type of accommodation in which young adults start their housing
career: an independent rented dwelling, shared accommodation, or home-ownership. In this
contribution we set out to unravel both the causes of the changing pattern of home-leaving
between successive cohorts and the relation with the housing market entry in successive
periods. The main hypothesis is that educational expansion was a major cause of the shift in
the mix of motives between cohorts, accounted for the accelerating pace of home-leaving, and
also affected the type of housing market entry. The empirical results support this hypothesis
but also show that the educational expansion does not provide a full explanation for either
phenomenon. Union formation in particular is invariably also determined by the employment
status of the male partner. Leaving home to live alone, on the other hand, is less sensitive to the
individual income but is clearly stimulated by ample parental resources. In housing choice, the
opportunity structure provides an extra explanation. The wider access to independent rental
accommodation, for instance, reduces the pent-up demand for shared accommodation that
results from the educational expansion
Keywords
educational expansion, housing market entry, leaving the parental home