May 25, 2012
Published: 30 Dec 09 07:56 CET | Double click on a word to get a translation
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/24118/20091230/
A lack of available affordable accommodation or poor personal finances prevent many young Swedes from packing their bags and moving out, much to the dismay of their parents.
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lång
adjective
Lång means long, tall and can be used for height, distance or time.
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Young people have a massive problem to get an affordable place to live, in London it's simply impossible !
However in the big cities such as Stockholm, Gothenburg, Malmö and Lund etc there are major shortages
(by the way also the reason for the often terrible condition you read about of Hyresrät).
In no other country I have been there is this ridiculous rental property shortage.
And there seem to be not a lot shared accommodations students live in. Where I come from most students live together in a flat of 4 or 3 people and share the kitchen and bathroom. From Swedish friends I heard this is not common here.
But everywhere I've been, no matter the government policies or the local culture or the economic system, young adults are having a much harder time moving out and living on their own than their parents' and grandparents' generations. I'm 21 and all of my friends around my age who moved out around 18 or 19 are now back at their parents after a stint on their own failed... the main reasons for failing are the fact that the cost of living is a lot higher and the wages people get paid are a lot lower than they were thirty or twenty years ago. These people are keeping their two jobs plus going to college part time (some full time) and still having to move back in with their parents to make ends meet.
I think Puffin makes a good point, though... Sweden has a ton of housing and room in the countryside. It's a pity that most Swedes are obsessed with ilving in the bigger cities because they are missing out on the vast majority of their country. But on the other hand, who can blame them when this is such a conservative and overregulated society? The distractions, hustle and bustle, bohemian options and anonymity of the cities makes people feel freer and that's one of the reasons Swedes are so attracted to cities rather than smaller or even medium-sized Swedish towns.
Your xenophobic manner of addressing issues whatever they are make it impossible for you to have inner peace...
Are you in anyway DEPRESSED or just acting Hagen all the time?
Get a life
@Mr. Puppy: I think the reason most people prefer to live in bigger cities in Sweden is the availability of jobs, just like in much of the rest of the world. Living somewhere in the middle of the countryside would be great, but then we'd also be unemployed, which would not exactly be ideal.
going after the same jobs.
True, the housing cost is a big issue, specially in cities like San Francisco, Boston, etc.
It is not a unique Swedish problem.