Originally posted by OzzyKP
I'd have to look over the study. But young people are most definitely poorer as a class than other age groups, the study didn't add the qualifier that income had been factored out as they did with liberals in general, so I can't necessarily say what the facts are here.
Also in question is what their definition of "young" is. 18-30? 11-18? Because I do know that youth volunteerism rates are higher than adults. (i don't know the political breakdown):
# Out of 13.3 million youth, 59.3% volunteer an average of 3.5 hours per week, versus 49% of the adult population volunteering an average of 4.2 hours. (Independent Sector/Gallup, 1996)
# 74.2% of high school seniors volunteered in 1998. (UCLA/Higher Education Research Institute Annual Freshmen Survey, 1999)
# 70% of young people ages 15-21 have participated in activities to help strengthen their community at some point in their lives. (Do Something/Princeton Survey Research, 1998
# Youth volunteering is up 12% over the last 10 years. (UCLA/Higher Education Research Institute Annual Freshmen Survey, 1999)
I'd have to look over the study. But young people are most definitely poorer as a class than other age groups, the study didn't add the qualifier that income had been factored out as they did with liberals in general, so I can't necessarily say what the facts are here.
Also in question is what their definition of "young" is. 18-30? 11-18? Because I do know that youth volunteerism rates are higher than adults. (i don't know the political breakdown):
# Out of 13.3 million youth, 59.3% volunteer an average of 3.5 hours per week, versus 49% of the adult population volunteering an average of 4.2 hours. (Independent Sector/Gallup, 1996)
# 74.2% of high school seniors volunteered in 1998. (UCLA/Higher Education Research Institute Annual Freshmen Survey, 1999)
# 70% of young people ages 15-21 have participated in activities to help strengthen their community at some point in their lives. (Do Something/Princeton Survey Research, 1998
# Youth volunteering is up 12% over the last 10 years. (UCLA/Higher Education Research Institute Annual Freshmen Survey, 1999)
JM
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