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Personal relationships of young adults in Spain and Portugal: sociability, isolation, and social inequality

Joan M. Verd, Mireia Bolíbar e Joan Rodríguez-Soler, Centre d’Estudis Sociològics sobre la Vida Quotidiana i el Treball, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; Rita Gouveia, Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa;

The young adult population in southern Europe, including Spain and Portugal, has traditionally had a strong network of personal relationships, supported by a high level of sociability and the very important role played by family networks. This article uses data from the European Social Survey in its tenth wave (2020-2022) to confirm the extent to which the sociability of young people (aged 18-34 years) in these two countries resembles, or not, that of the rest of the European Union. Specifically, this sociability is compared with that of young people in the other EU countries, with the exception of Denmark, Luxembourg, Malta, and Romania. The data analysed make it possible to identify their level of social isolation and the factors influencing it. The results show that sociability levels in Spain and Portugal are higher than the European average, and that affective closeness to parents scores the highest in the European Union. The inequality factors that influence social isolation among young adults are similar to those seen in other countries, although their negative effect is always more cushioned in Spain and Portugal, which leads to a lower level of social isolation.
Key points
  • 1
       In the European Union, 52.4% of young people meet friends, family, or co-workers, in their free time, every day or several times a week. Spain slightly exceeds this percentage (56.0%), while Portugal is one of the countries with the highest frequency of interactions (67.9%).
  • 2
       Despite the higher frequency of interactions among young people in Portugal, the size of their personal networks is smaller in comparison with Spain and the European Union as a whole. In Portugal, the most common personal network size is 3 people, while in Spain and the European Union it is 4-6 people.
  • 3
       In Spain and Portugal, the young adult population shows a higher frequency of interaction with parents. While 70.6% of Spanish young adults meet with their parents at least once a day, in Portugal the percentage is 51.9% and, in the whole of the European Union, 49.2%.
  • 4
       The percentage of young Spanish adults (56.6%) who declare a high degree of affective proximity with their parents is the highest in the European Union, with Portugal standing in third position (49.5%), still much higher than the European average (37.9%).
  • 5
       The young adults suffering the highest percentage of social isolation are those of foreign origin, those in a situation of greater economic vulnerability, and those in unemployment or who have been in long-term unemployment. Greater sociability and contact with the family in Spain and Portugal have an impact on lower levels of social isolation of their young people in comparison to those of the European Union as a whole.

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