Families, communities, and nations are stronger when individuals understand the importance of getting married and staying married. In a recent week, I wrote about the Success Sequence, which was discovered by social scientists. Through numerous studies, researchers discovered a correlation between a certain formula and the chances of reaching the middle class or higher.
The
Success Sequence includes the following: get an education (at least graduate
from high school), work full time, and get married before having children. To
be successful, steps must be taken in the correct order: education, a full-time
job, and marriage before children.
I
recently listened to a presentation given by Melissa S. Kearney, a self-described
“hardheaded – albeit softhearted – MIT-trained economist.” I liked her talk so
much that I ordered her book titled The Two-Parent Privilege: How Americans
Stopped Getting Married and Started Falling Behind. Her message is the same
message given by the Success Sequence: marriage is important to success. Here
is a sample of information found in her book:
Some might argue that placing marriage at
the center of a conversation about children is antiquated and unhelpful:
marriage is in many ways less fashionable than it was four decades ago.
Marriage rates have fallen significantly in the US, including among adults who
have children. It’s important to recognize that these changes in marriage patterns
are not without consequence for how children are being raised. Data show
conclusively that parents are not cohabitating without marriage in a way that
remotely accounts for the decrease in two-parent married households. These kids
are more often living with one parent. What’s more, data show that these trends
are highly correlated with the parent’s education: The share of children living
in two-parent homes is 71% when the mother has only a high school degree and 70%
when she does not have a high school degree. A much higher share, 88%, of
children of mothers with a four-year college degree live in a two-parent home.
Why does this issue matter for kids’
outcomes? Because children who grow up without two parents in their home are at
a substantial disadvantage relative to kids who do. That is not to say that
children who are raised by a single mother can’t go on to achieve great things.
Of course they can, and many do! But there are also mounds of social science
evidence that shows how the odds of graduating high school, getting a college
degree, and having high earnings in adulthood are substantially lower for
children who grow up in a single-mother home. The odds of becoming a single
parent are also substantially higher for children who grow up with a single
mother, again illustrating the compounding nature of inequality. It is not only
that lacking two parents makes it harder for some kids to go to college and
lead a comfortable life; in the aggregate, it also undermines social mobility
and perpetuates inequality across generations.
The forces that drive inequality are
contributing to these demographic changes at the household level. Meanwhile,
these household changes are exacerbating inequality. It is a vicious cycle. It
has become increasingly difficult, for example, for someone without a high level
of education or skill to achieve economic security and success in the US.
Adults who have lower levels of education and earnings are less likely to get
married and raise their children in two-parent homes. Their kids grow up with
fewer resources and opportunities, and they don’t do as well in school as their
peers from married, higher-income families. Boys from disadvantaged homes are
more likely to get in trouble in school and with the criminal justice system;
girls from disadvantaged homes are more likely to become young, unmarried
mothers. These children grow up to have children who are more likely to be born
into disadvantaged situations. Social mobility is undermined, and inequality
persists across generations. It is an economic imperative for the United States
to break this cycle, and doing so will require coming at the problem from all
dimensions.
This book draws heavily on data and
empirical research, including the economic interpretation of statistics from public
sources. The thesis of the book and the conclusions I draw are solidly grounded
in evidence and in my professional expertise, which is analyzing and
interpreting data. My training as an economist also leads me to approach data
and evidence with a particular theoretical framework, one that thinks in terms
of resources and the cause-and-effect relationships between factors and
outcomes. In this book, I apply that approach to the complex issues of
marriage, childbearing, and raising children. (pages 8-10)
Kearney
indicated that breaking the inequality cycle will take effort from several
directions. However, it is obvious from the Success Sequence and Kearney’s book
that getting married before having children and staying married is a crucial
step to ending inequality and lack of success. Marriage is ordained of God
because it blesses His children. Marriage before having children will
strengthen families, communities, and nations.
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