Families are stronger when parents understand and instruct their children about the numerous ways that culture divides people in America. One of those ways “extends to parenthood, “according to an article by Kevin Stocklin that The Daily Signal published. Here is Stocklin’s explanation for why there is a parenting divide in American culture.
A
new report from the Institute for Family Studies states that a fertility gap
has opened up between the Left and the Right. Based on a survey of 7,000
Americans, age 18 to 54, the study found that conservative respondents had, on
average, 1.4 children, compared to 1.09 for liberals. A birth rate of 2.1
children per woman is the minimum to sustain a population. More than half of
liberal respondents reported having no children at all, compared to 40% of
conservatives.
“Progressives
are more likely to look at marriage and parenthood as decent options to
consider but not necessarily as primary vocations,” Brad Wilcox, IFS senior
fellow, told the Daily Signal. Conservatives are more likely to see marriage,
motherhood, and fatherhood as core parts of their identity.”
Religion
likely plays a key role.
“In
the U.S. and in other parts of the world, political conservatives tend to be
more religious than political liberals, and more religious people tend to have more
kids,” Tom Vogl, an economics professor at the University of California, San
Diego, told the Daily Signal.
Those
on the left often find that purpose in career or social causes rather than
children.
“If
you’re fighting to save the planet, if you’re fighting against white supremacy,
that gives your life meaning,” Timothy Carney, senior fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute, told the Daily Signal. “And so, what secularization means
is that politics becomes their religion.”
Across
the board, America’s fertility rate has fallen by more than half over the last
century, from 110.9 births per 1,000 women in 1924 to 53.8 in 2024, according
to USA Facts. This brings significant societal ramifications.
“An
aging society with fewer young workers must either raise productivity
dramatically, attract more workers, reduce government spending, raise taxes or
some combination of all four,” Thomas Savidge, a research fellow at the
American Institute for Economic Research, told the Daily Signal.
Raising
children certainly comes with costs. A new Harvard report, for example, states
that house prices rose 54% since 2020, now averaging five times the median
income.
Despite
this, however, fewer conservatives (24%) than liberals (36%) saw parenting as “very
complicated, difficult, and stressful,” the IFS noted.
The
IFS survey found that anxiety about parenting also played a role: 18% of
liberals doubted whether they would be good parents compared to 9% of
conservatives; 19% of liberals said their mental health wasn’t good enough to
have children, compared to 10% of conservatives; and 18% of liberals worried
about passing down unhealthy traits, compared to 10% of conservatives.
“The
act of having children is fundamentally an act of hope,” De Gance said.
“When
we’re open to life and want to bring a new child into this world, it’s being
hopeful in the future for that child,” he said. “I think our friends on the
left are more likely to be fearful of the future.”
Beliefs
regarding the impact of people on the environment are also relevant.
“If
you want to understand why the birth rate is collapsing, you can’t just look at
economics or politics, you have to look at spiritual questions, and one of the
questions is: are we good?” Carney said.
“There’s
a Christian answer to that, which is that we’re good, but we’re fallen,” he
said. “If you’re a secular liberal today, you look at the obvious flaws and it’s
hard for you to think the human species is a good thing.”
It’s
not just that blue states are having fewer children, many of the families they
have are leaving. Since 2000, red states saw a 7% increase in their child
population, while blue states experienced a 7% decline, according to the IFS.
“We’re
seeing hundreds of thousands of families migrate from blue states to red
states,” Wilcox said. “States like Texas, Tennessee, South Carolina, and Idaho have
been the recipients of a lot of families looking to move to places that are
often more culturally, educationally, and economically attractive to them.”
Despite
“family-friendly” mandates on parental leave and childcare in many blue states,
parents appear to prefer red states’ lower taxes and housing costs, better job
prospects, and school choice.
But
all is not lost, even for low-fertility regions.
“Some
of the current below-replacement fertility rates may reflect the postponement
of births to later ages, so it’s not obvious that population decline is around
the corner for the U.S.,” Vogl said.
Indeed,
while the number of mothers under 25 has declined, the number over 35 has
increased significantly, such that more women over 40 are now giving birth than
are teens. And when asked the number of children they ideally wanted to have,
conservatives averaged 2.71, and liberals averaged 2.165, IFS reported.
While
government programs are seldom effective in boosting fertility, experts say
things like increasing child tax credits and cutting regulations that
discourage construction of single-family houses could help.
“[Parents}
don’t need a huge home, but people want to have their own place,” De Gance
said. “One of the big things blue states have done is make it harder to build
homes and skewed their policy to high-density and mixed-use communities, and
these are things that generally tend to discourage fertility.”
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