The piece is here (free registration required).
I know many here will decry this form of help. I don't know how typical this is (it would be hard to even gather any semi-reliable data on this). But it does seem like the Time's Anna Bahney isn't focusing on what was memorably described in The Millionaire Next Door as "economic outpatient care". And the point from the parent about enjoying her inheritance with her kids now will surely resonate with many who have plenty of cash and kids or grandkids.
My initial reaction is that provided their are clear understandings about what is being provided and on what terms (if any), this might be a prudent thing to do in any number of circumstances.
An excerpt:he receives monthly assistance from his parents, in the form of a $300 check and the payment of his cellphone bill.
This is not the largesse of wealthy families doled out through trust funds. Nor is the money a couple of $20 bills tucked into a card at the holidays. Mr. McGuinness and others like him are the beneficiaries of an increasingly common subsidy arriving regularly from Mom and Dad, something like a family fellowship.
It helps to pay for housing, bills and travel expenses, and the support has been increasing for the past two decades as education is extended, marriage is delayed and young people take the scenic route from adolescence to adulthood.
"Everybody I know is supporting their children in some way," said Gail Horowitz, Mr. McGuinness's mother, a vice president of the Zlokower Company, a public relations firm in Manhattan. Unlike young adults who "boomerang" back home to live with their parents — the subject of the recent comedy "Failure to Launch" — these young people live independently. But they need help to make ends meet, or put another way, to maintain a middle-class way of life.
The bottom line is that the assumption that financial obligations to children ended after graduation from high school or college is going the way of the pay phone. Today, parents are finding that they are on the hook for more, sometimes much more — contributions of thousands of dollars a year to help young men and women get on their feet economically, often into their 30's.

