How Helping Your Adult Children Financially Can End Up Hurting Their Career

When parents give their children money, especially college graduates, those kids go on to have greater professional success. But when those adult children live at home for free, it’s a different story.

Mom and dad’s financial support can spark a successful career for their children—depending on how they provide support, that is.

When parents give their children money, especially college graduates, those kids go on to have greater professional success, according to a report by Anna Manzoni, associate professor of sociology at North Carolina State University. But when parents provide their children with financial assistance in other ways—letting them live at home for free, for instance—the opposite is true. Manzoni looked at data of more than 7,500 adults between 18 and 28 years old from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, which tracks job status.

Also see: The black-white wealth gap is fueled by student debt

College graduates who received money from their parents did especially well professionally, while college graduates who lived at home did especially poorly. Young adults who received more than $15,000 a year from their parents ranked 5 points higher on the researchers’ scale of occupational status—measured by income—than those receiving no or little monetary support. However, adult children living at home ranked 10 points lower than those who lived independently.

“This highlights one way that social inequality is carried forward across generations,” Manzoni said in a statement. “Children whose families can afford to provide direct support do very well. Other families offer the only support they can afford, by offering their kids a place to live. But this appears to adversely affect career outcomes.”

The perils of allowing your children to live at home

Young adults who are living at home for free may be less willing or able to move to cities where the job market are thriving. Living at home can also create a culture of dependency, according to Jared Buckley, a business strategist focused on millennials. “Moving out develops character and soft skills you cannot learn while under your parents roof,” he wrote. “What has more value, development or finances?”

Also see: 24 million millennials are living with their parents, but not all for economic reasons

Still, more adults are living with their parents and grandparents than ever before. In 2014, 60.6 million people (or 19% of the U.S. population) lived in a multigenerational household, up from 42.4 million (17%) in 2009 and 27.5 million (12%) in 1980. One in nine baby boomer parents said their adult children returned home between 2016 and 2017, according to a Fidelity Investments and Stanford Center on Longevity survey of 9,000 employees.

Not all millennials living at home are doing so to avoid paying their own rent. In some scenarios, they’re living with their parents to get a head start on saving for a home or building a nest egg and, in other cases, they’re the ones helping their parents pay the bills. Millennials spent about $18,000 a year on average helping their parents, according to a 2015 TD Ameritrade study, and that trend will likely continue as ageing parents find they need more help in retirement.

Inequality is a persistent problem in America

In the U.S., out of 100 children whose parents are among the bottom 10% of income earners, only 20 to 30 of them actually go to college, according to separate research by the World Inequality Lab, a research project in over 70 countries based at the Paris School of Economics. However, 90 out of 100 children go to college if their parents are within the top 10% of earners.

One recent study said that rich parents are serving as “college concierges” for their kids—and it’s fueling inequality.Only one-third of less affluent parents were involved in their daughters’ college careers, a study of 41 families of young women who lived in the same dorm at a public university in the Midwest.

See: Advice from ‘Broke Millennial’ on how to live with your parents

Just one-third of the less affluent families were involved in their daughters’ careers, but the researchers said it made little difference because those families didn’t have the financial resources to make a significant difference in their college outcome.

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