The Standard (St. Catharines)

Rise in multigener­ational households

Immigratio­n, aging, housing costs all a factor, census data shows

- PAOLA LORIGGIO THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — About a year after Yi Jiang and her family moved to Ottawa from China, they found themselves sharing a two-bedroom apartment with her parents.

After living together in Shenzhen, it seemed only natural that once the entire family was in Canada, her parents would live with her, her husband and their young son, she said. The couple has since had another child, and last year all six moved to a house in the suburbs.

“It’s very important for me to live with them ... they are the most important people in my life and I am the only child,” said Jiang, a producer for a Mandarin radio show.

Such arrangemen­ts are very common in China and many continue the practice after they immigrate, she added.

Such appears to be the case in Canada, where the latest tranche of Statistics Canada data from the 2016 census shows a significan­t spike in the growth rate of multigener­ational households — a 37.5 per cent increase since 2001, surpassing the 21.7 per cent rate of growth in households overall.

Some 2.2 million people, 6.3 per cent of the population living in private households, were part of a multigener­ational living arrangemen­t — at least three generation­s under one roof — last year, the agency reported Wednesday.

Statistics Canada attributes the increase, in part, to “Canada’s changing ethnocultu­ral compositio­n,” as well as “housing needs and the high cost of living in some regions of the country.” The aging population has also played a role, experts say.

The trend is also prominent in Indigenous communitie­s: in Nunavut, one in eight households was multigener­ational, while in the Northwest Territorie­s, the living arrangemen­t makes up 4.3 per cent of all households.

The ratio was 3.9 per cent in Ontario and 3.6 per cent in B.C., two provinces that are home to the bulk of Canada’s immigrant population. Cities such as Abbotsford and Mission, B.C., Toronto and Vancouver recorded the highest percentage­s locally.

Such communal living arrangemen­ts may seem like a novel new trend, but in fact it’s a long-standing practice, said Nora Spinks, CEO of the Vanier Institute of the Family.

“Right now the proportion of multigener­ational households is high, relative to recent history, but if you go back pre-war, most households were multigener­ational; somebody always took in Mom or Dad,” Spinks said.

“It was only through that weird blip post-war 1950s, 1960s where every generation had their own household, and you moved out at 18 or 19, and you got your own apartment and you never returned home and everybody had their own toaster and everybody had their own everything.”

Some families end up living together by choice, some by necessity, she added.

There may be a cultural expectatio­n that adult children welcome their parents into their home, or a need for grandparen­ts to provide child-care, or a push to split living expenses in the face of a housing crunch, Spinks said.

Sometimes the move is initiated by parents or grandparen­ts who need care, sometimes by 20-somethings who “boomerang” home after going through a breakup or layoff, she said. “It goes in all directions,” she said.

Indeed, the boomerang effect got special treatment in Wednesday’s census data. Statistics Canada reported that 34.7 per cent of young adults aged 20 to 34 were living with at least one parent last year, up from 30.6 per cent in 2001.

And where it was previously assumed that those 20-somethings would move back out after landing on their feet, Spinks said the latest data show many have continued to live with their parents even after forming unions of their own or having children.

The percentage of young adults living with a family of their own and without their parents dropped from 49.1 per cent in 2001 to 41.9 per cent in 2016

Regardless of what causes families to pool resources, such arrangemen­ts have a ripple effect on the economy, Spinks said. And some may find it difficult to untangle their finances down the line — particular­ly when it comes to real estate — putting a strain on relationsh­ips.

“You might be subsidizin­g your parents by giving them your Netflix password or putting them on your cell plan or something, and so there is a cash value of that — if they wanted it and you didn’t give it to them they would be spending $10 a month for Netflix,” she said.

“So it does have positive and negative economic and social implicatio­ns.”

Living together also affects family dynamics, said Kenise Kilbride, an adjunct professor at Toronto’s Ryerson University who has studied multigener­ational living in immigrant families.

Older relatives may wish to maintain a more traditiona­l lifestyle, while children want to fit in with their peers, she said, putting pressure on parents from both sides.

The transition may be easier in families with a history of multigener­ational living, she said.

Having her parents so close has spared Jiang and her husband — who both work outside the home — a mountain of stress and expenses. They help with child care and prepare most meals, she noted.

It has also allowed her children, 5 and 2, to receive care in Mandarin and grow closer to their grandparen­ts.

“I know there are always barriers, cultural difference­s, and lack of understand­ing around us in Canada, but it is beneficial for my parents and I to live together,” she said. “My parents are getting older, we are sensitive to each other’s needs and to help each other, not only in life, but also in psychology. I think multiple generation­s under one roof may alleviate a lot of social burden and be beneficial to society.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Yi Jiang and husband Jianqiao Sun play soccer with their son Sunny Jiang as daughter Jenny Sun sits with grandparen­ts Youfang Jiang and Li Zhang in the backyard of their home, in Ottawa on Monday. The family immigrated to Canada from China and live...
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Yi Jiang and husband Jianqiao Sun play soccer with their son Sunny Jiang as daughter Jenny Sun sits with grandparen­ts Youfang Jiang and Li Zhang in the backyard of their home, in Ottawa on Monday. The family immigrated to Canada from China and live...

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