The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Young women in US favor jobs outside the home

- ByHope Yen

The milestones of adulthood for today’s millennial­s: economic security and finishing school — not rushing to get married and have a family.

And once they are married, young women in America are less likely to see homemaking as a career.

The share of young women 25 to 34 who opted to forgo outside employment in favor of managing a household plunged from 43 percent in 1975 to just 14 percent last year, according to the Census Bureau. Census demographe­rs believe that number could be among the lowest on record.

It’s part of a long-running trend of higher educationa­l attainment for women but also a reflection of changing attitudes among Americans.

“We see more young women who have a college degree and are in the labor force, and they are waiting to get married and have kids,” said Jonathan Vespa, a demographe­r at the Census Bureau. Demographe­rs found changing U.S. sentiment in which more than half of Americans now believe marrying and having children are not important signs of reaching independen­ce.

More young adults than before are focusing first on receiving a bachelor’s degree or higher and securing a job.

They are still actively pursuing romantic relationsh­ips but opting to cohabitate or court mates while living with mom and dad.

The findings were part of a census report released Wednesday tracking the changing economics and demographi­cs of young adults from 1976 to 2016, with a focus on the current generation of 25 to 34 year olds, known asmillenni­als.

Many analysts had expected that as the economy improved, younger adults would increasing­ly move out on their own, either living independen­tly or starting families. But that hasn’t happened.

Vespa said educationa­l gains for women in particular have led to broader changes as to how Americans view work and family.

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