Friday 17 April 2009

Britain in 2009: A nation of bullied social networkers who don’t believe in global warming

 Online networking is popular among children - 27 per cent of eight- to
11-year-olds have a web profile, but only 15 per cent of parents do so

The annual Social Trends study published by the Office for National Statistics presents a revealing portrait of the way we live now.

Nearly two million men aged between 20 and 34 still live with their parents, almost twice the number of women of the same age. The proportion of young adults who are reluctant or unable to leave home has increased by about 300,000 since 2001. Far more are continuing with their studies, while others are unemployed. The lack of affordable housing is the chief deciding factor in living with parents. The proportion of single-person households has doubled since 1971, from 6 per cent to 12 per cent, while the number of marriages in England and Wales – 237,000 in 2006 – was the lowest for more than a century. The average age at which people tie the knot is 31.8 for men and 29.7 for women. In the past 10 years, the number of women under 25 giving birth has overtaken the number marrying by that age.

EDUCATION   LAW and ORDER  EMPLOYMENT   POPULATION

LIFE STYLE   WEALTH  HEALTH   HOUSING   TRAVEL  ENVIRONMENT

and SOCIETY

Britain in 2009: A nation of bullied social networkers who don’t believe in global warming - This Britain, UK - The Independent