The
Daily Signal
A
Majority of Young Adults Are Having Kids Outside Marriage. Why That
Hurts Kids’ Futures.
Rachel
Sheffield
June
21, 2014
Among
young adults, first comes baby, then (maybe) comes marriage. This
increasingly is the new normal.
According
to a new study from Johns Hopkins University, 57 percent of mothers
between 26 and 31 are unmarried when their child is born
But
not all young adults are having kids outside of marriage. Instead,
the key factor appears to be whether a young woman has attended
college.
Among
mothers without a high school degree, 63 percent of births occur
outside marriage. But among college educated young women, 71 percent
of births occur within marriage.
Unfortunately,
these differences have consequences. “The U.S. is steadily
separating into a two-caste system with marriage and education as the
dividing line,” says my colleague Robert Rector.
“In
the high-income third of the population, children are raised by
married parents with a college education. In the bottom-income third,
children are raised by single parents with a high school degree or
less.”
Similarly,
the authors of the Hopkins study found that “American society is
moving toward two different patterns of family formation and two
diverging destinies for children.”
But
one of those destinies is far less promising, leaving a significant
portion of the nation’s next generation with less opportunity.
Children
in single-parent homes are more than five times as likely to
experience poverty. That isn’t simply because of their parents’
generally lower education level. Even parents with lower levels of
education are at far less risk of poverty if they are married.
Children
raised by their married, biological parents have other advantages.
They are more likely to graduate from high school or college, less
likely to engage in delinquent behaviors and less likely to become
single parents themselves.
So
why do many young adults then still have children outside of
marriage?
It’s
not because they’re anti-marriage: Research suggests that young,
single mothers are not hostile to marriage. Yet they don’t believe
it is necessary to marry prior to having children. Rather than seeing
marriage as a step to achieving a stable family and social mobility,
they view it as a capstone that occurs after they have arrived.
Still,
, young men and women don’t seem to understand the consequences of
the breakdown of marriage. Thus, the first step would be to get the
message out about the importance of marriage in building stable
families and communities, particularly in areas where this stability
is not the norm.
Additionally,
leaders at every level should engage in finding ways to strengthen
and maintain healthy families. Examples of this include high schools
in Alabama that have taught relationship education courses to youth,
the community healthy marriage initiative in Chattanooga, Tenn., that
provides relationship education and other resources to couples and
families, or the state healthy marriage initiative in Oklahoma that
operates marriage and relationship education programs for
lower-income couples.
Restoring
a culture of marriage is crucial to today’s generation and to the
generations they will raise. The goal for all individuals, families,
churches, communities and policymakers should be to give every
child–regardless of economic background–the greatest opportunity
to be reared by their mother and father in a stable married
relationship.
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