City Journal
Marriage and Caste
America’s chief source of inequality? The Marriage Gap.
Kay S. Hymowitz
Winter 2006
For a while it looked like Hurricane
Katrina would accomplish what the NAACP never could: reviving civil
rights liberalism as a major force in American politics. There it was
for the whole world to see: the United States was two nations, one
rich, one poor and largely black, one driving away in the family SUV to
sleep in the snug guest rooms of suburban friends and relatives, the
other sunk in the fetid misery of the Superdome. Newsweek, echoing
Michael Harrington’s 1962 landmark book that ignited the War on
Poverty, titled its Katrina coverage “The Other America” and warned the
nation not to return to the “old evasions, hypocrisies, and
not-so-benign neglect” of the “problems of poverty, race, and class.”
Though that liberalism revival only lasted for about five minutes, the post-Katrina insight was correct. There are
millions of poor Americans, living not just in down-on-your-luck
hardship but in entrenched, multigenerational poverty. There is growing
inequality between the haves and the have-nots. And there are reasons
to worry whether the American dream is within the reach of all.
But what two-America talk doesn’t get is just how much these ominous
trends are entangled with the collapse of the nuclear family. While
Americans have been squabbling about gay marriage, they have managed to
miss the real marriage-and-social-justice issue, one that affects far
more people and threatens to undermine the American project. We are now
a nation of separate and unequal families not only living separate and
unequal lives but, more worrisome, destined for separate and unequal
futures.
Two-America Jeremiahs usually nod at the single-parent family as a
piece of the inequality story, but quickly change the subject to
describe—accurately, as far as it goes—an economy that has implacably
squeezed out manufacturing jobs, reduced wages for the low-skilled, and
made a wallet-busting college education crucial to a middle-class
future. But one can’t disentangle the economic from the family piece.
Given that families socialize children for success—or not—and given how
marriage orders lives, they are the same problem. Separate and unequal
families produce separate and unequal economic fates.
Most people understand what happened to the
American family over the last half-century along these lines: the birth
control pill begat the sexual and feminist revolutions of the 1960s,
which begat the decline of the traditional nuclear family, which in
turn introduced the country to a major new demographic: the single
mother. Divorce became as ubiquitous as the automobile; half of all
marriages, we are often reminded, will end in family court. Growing
financial independence and changing mores not only gave women the
freedom to divorce in lemming-like numbers; it also allowed them to
dispense with marriage altogether and have children, Murphy
Brown–style, on their own. (This is leaving aside inner-city teenage
mothers, whom just about everyone sees as an entirely different and
more troubling category.) Today, we frequently hear, a third of all
children are born to unmarried women.
To put it a little differently, after the 1960s women no longer felt
compelled to follow the life course charted in a once-popular childhood
rhyme—first comes love, then marriage, then the baby carriage. Sure,
some people got married, had kids, and stayed married for life, but the
hegemony of Ozzie and his brood was past. Alternative families are just
the way things are; for better or for worse, in a free society people
get to choose their own “lifestyles”-bringing their children along for
the ride-and they are doing so not just in the United States but all
over the Western world.
That picture turns out to be as equivocal as an Escher lithograph,
however. As the massive social upheaval following the 1960s—what
Francis Fukuyama has termed “the Great Disruption”—has settled into the
new normal, social scientists are finding out that when it comes to the
family, America really has become two nations. The old-fashioned
married-couple-with-children model is doing quite well among
college-educated women. It is primarily among lower-income women with
only a high school education that it is in poor health. This fact may
not conform to the view from Hollywood; movies from Kramer vs. Kramer to The Ice Storm to the recent The Squid and the Whale,
not to mention unmarried celebrity moms like Goldie Hawn and moms-to-be
like Katie Holmes, have helped reinforce the perception that elite
women snubbing a conformist patriarchy were the vanguard of a vast
social change. Now it’s pretty clear that this is a myth saying more
about La-La Land than the reality of American family breakdown.
The most important recent analysis of that
reality is “The Uneven Spread of Single-Parent Families,” a 2004 paper
by Harvard’s David Ellwood and Christopher Jencks. The Kennedy School
profs divide American mothers into three categories by education level:
women with a college degree or higher; women with a high school diploma
(including those with some college, whose trends look very similar to
those with high school alone); and women who never graduated high
school. The paper’s findings are worth pondering in some detail.
Forty-five years ago, there was only a small difference in the way
American women went about the whole marriage-and-children question;
just about everyone, from a Smith grad living in New Canaan,
Connecticut, to a high school dropout in Appalachia, first tied the
knot and only then delivered the bouncing bundle of joy. As of 1960,
the percentage of women with either a college or high school diploma
who had children without first getting married was so low that you’d
need a magnifying glass to find it on a graph; even the percentage of
high school dropouts who were never-married mothers barely hit 1
percent. Moreover, after getting married and having a baby, almost all
women stayed married. A little under 5 percent of mothers in the top
third of the education distribution and about 6 percent of the middle
group were either divorced or separated (though these figures don’t
include divorced-and-then-remarried mothers). And while marital breakup
was higher among mothers who were high school dropouts, their divorce
rate was still only a modest 8 percent or so.
That all changed in the decades following the 1960s, when, as
everyone who was alive at the time remembers, the American family
seemed on the verge of self-immolation. For women, marriage and
children no longer seemed part of the same story line. Instead of
staying married for the kids, mothers at every education level joined
the national divorce binge. By 1980, the percentage of divorced
college-educated mothers more than doubled, to 12 percent—about the
same percentage as divorced mothers with a high school diploma or with
some college. For high school dropout mothers, the percentage increased
to 15 percent. An increasing number of women had children without
getting married at all. So far the story conforms to general theory.
But around 1980, the family-forming habits
of college grads and uneducated women went their separate ways. For the
next decade the proportion of college-educated moms filing for divorce
stopped increasing, and by 1990 it actually starting going down. This
was not the case for the least educated mothers, who continued on a
divorce spree for another ten years. It was only in 1990 that their
increase in divorce also started to slow and by 2000 to decline, though
it was too late to close the considerable gap between them and their
more privileged sisters.
Far more dramatic were the divergent trends in what was still known
at the time as illegitimacy. Yes, out-of-wedlock childbearing among
women with college diplomas tripled, but because their numbers started
at Virtually Nonexistent in 1960 (a fraction of 1 percent), they only
moved up to Minuscule in 1980 (a little under 3 percent of mothers in
the top third of education distribution) to end up at a Rare 4 percent.
Things were radically different for mothers in the lower two
educational levels. They decided that marriage and children were two
entirely unconnected life experiences. That decline in their divorce
rate after 1990? Well, it turns out the reason for it wasn’t that these
women had thought better of putting their children through a parental
breakup, as many of their more educated sisters had; it was that they
weren’t getting married in the first place. Throughout the 1980s and
nineties, the out-of-wedlock birthrate soared to about 15 percent among
mothers with less than a high school education and 10 percent of those
with a high school diploma or with some college.
Many people assume that these low-income
never-married mothers are teen mothers, but teens are only a subset of
unmarried mothers, and a rather small one in recent years. Yes, the
U.S. continues to be the teen-mommy capital of the Western world, with
4 percent of teen girls having babies, a rate considerably higher than
Europe’s. But that rate is almost one-third lower than it was in 1991,
and according to up-to-the-minute figures from the National Center for
Health Statistics, teens account for only about a quarter of unwed
births—compared with half in 1970. Today 55 percent of unmarried births
are to women between 20 and 24; another 28 percent are to 25- to
29-year-olds. These days, it is largely low-income twentysomethings who
are having a baby without a wedding ring. The good news is that single
mothers are not as likely to be 15; the bad news is that there is now
considerable evidence to suggest that, while their prospects may be a
little better than their teenage sisters’ would be, they are not
dramatically so.
Race has also added to misperceptions about single mothers. It’s
easy to see why, with close to 70 percent of black children born to
single mothers today—including educated mothers—compared with 25
percent of non-black kids. But blacks make up only 12 percent of the
country’s population, and black children account for only one-third of
the nation’s out-of-wedlock kids.
Tune out the static from teen pregnancy, race, and Murphy Brown,
then, and the big news comes into focus: starting in 1980, Americans
began to experience a widening Marriage Gap that has reached dangerous
proportions. As of 2000, only about 10 percent of mothers with 16 or
more years of education—that is, with a college degree or higher—were
living without husbands. Compare that with 36 percent of mothers who
have between nine and 14 years of education. All the statistics about
marriage so often rehashed in magazine and newspaper articles hide a
startling truth. Yes, 33 percent of children are born to single
mothers; in 2004, according to the National Center for Health
Statistics, that amounted to 1.5 million children, the highest number
ever. But the vast majority of those children are going home from the
maternity wards to low-rent apartments. Yes, experts predict that about
40 to 50 percent of marriages will break up. But most of those divorces
will involve women who have always shopped at Wal-Mart. “[T]he rise in
single-parent families is concentrated among blacks and among the less
educated,” summarize Ellwood and Jencks. “It hardly occurred at all
among women with a college degree.”
When Americans began their family
revolution four decades ago, they didn’t tend to talk very much about
its effect on children. That oversight now haunts the country, as it
becomes increasingly clear that the Marriage Gap results in a yawning
social divide. If you want to discuss why childhood poverty numbers
have remained stubbornly high through the years that the nation was
aggressively trying to lower them, begin with the Marriage Gap.
Thirty-six percent of female-headed families are below the poverty
line. Compare that with the 6 percent of married-couple families in
poverty—a good portion of whom are recent, low-skilled immigrants,
whose poverty, if history is any guide, is temporary. The same goes if
you want to analyze the inequality problem—start with the Marriage Gap.
Virtually all—92 percent—of children whose families make over $75,000
are living with both parents. On the other end of the income scale, the
situation is reversed: only about 20 percent of kids in families
earning under $15,000 live with both parents.
Princeton sociologist Sara McLanahan, co-author of the breakthrough book Growing Up With a Single Parent, has fleshed out the implications of the Marriage Gap for children in an important paper in Demography—and
they’re not pretty. McLanahan observes that, after 1970, women at all
income levels began to marry at older ages, and the average age of
first marriage moved into the mid-twenties. But where mothers at the
top of the income scale also put off having children until they were
married, spending their years before marriage getting degrees or
working, those at the bottom did neither.
The results radically split the experiences of children. Children in
the top quartile now have mothers who not only are likely to be
married, but also are older, more mature, better educated, and nearly
three times as likely to be employed (whether full- or part-time) as
are mothers of children in the bottom quartile. And not only do
top-quartile children have what are likely to be more effective
mothers; they also get the benefit of more time and money from their
live-in fathers.
For children born at the bottom of the income scale, the situation is the reverse. They face a decrease
in what McLanahan terms “resources”: their mothers are younger, less
stable, less educated, and, of course, have less money. Adding to their
woes, those children aren’t getting much (or any) financial support and
time from their fathers. Surprisingly, McLanahan finds that in Europe,
too—where welfare supports for “lone parents,” as they are known in
Britain, are much higher than in the United States—single mothers are
still more likely to be poor and less educated. As in the United
States, so in Europe and, no doubt, the rest of the world: children in
single-parent families are getting less of just about everything that
we know helps to lead to successful adulthood.
All this makes depressing sense, but when
you think about it, the Marriage Gap itself presents a puzzle. Why
would women working for a pittance at the supermarket cash registers
decide to have children without getting married, while women writing
briefs at Debevoise & Plimpton, who could easily afford to go it
alone, insist on finding husbands before they start families? For a
long time, social scientists assumed, reasonably enough, that economic
self-sufficiency would lead more women to opt for single motherhood.
And to listen to the drone of complaint about men around water coolers,
in Internet chat rooms, on the Oxygen Network, and in Maureen
Dowdworld, there would seem to be plenty of potential recruits for
Murphy Browndom. Certainly when they talk to pollsters, women say that
they don’t think there’s anything wrong with having a baby
without a husband. Yet the women who are forgoing husbands are
precisely the ones who can least afford to do so.
The conventional answer to the puzzle is this: in an economy marked
by manufacturing decline, especially in cities, too many of the
potential husbands for low-income women are either flipping burgers,
unemployed, or in jail—in other words, poor marriage material. But
three facts raise doubts about this theory.
One, it’s not just unemployed men or McDonald’s cooks who have
become marriage-avoidant; working-class men with decent jobs are also
shying from the altar. Two, cohabitation among low-income couples has
been increasing; about 40 percent of all out-of-wedlock babies today
are born to cohabiting parents. Why would there be a dearth of
marriageable men, when there appear to be plenty of cohabitable
fathers? And three, marriage improves the economic situation of
low-income women, even if their husbands are only deliverymen or
janitors. In a large and highly regarded study, the Urban Institute’s
Robert Lerman concluded that married, low-income, low-educated women
enjoyed significantly higher living standards than comparable single
mothers. Joe Sixpack may not be Mr. Darcy, but financially, at any
rate, he’s a lot better than no husband at all.
Still, whatever the arguments against it, the no-marriageable-men
theory is entrenched in policy circles and in the academy and is
unlikely to go anywhere soon, so let’s try another approach to the
Marriage Gap conundrum. Instead of asking why poor and near-poor women
have stopped marrying before having children, let’s think instead about
why educated women continue to do so—even though, in order to be
accepted in polite company or to put food on the table, they don’t need
to.
One possible answer is especially pertinent
to the Marriage Gap: educated women know that they’d better marry if
they want their children to succeed academically, which increasingly is
critical to succeeding in the labor market. The New Economy may have
made single motherhood a workable arrangement for high-earning mothers
in purely economic terms, but it made a husband a must-have in terms of
child rearing. No one understands better than an Amherst or Stanford
B.A. that her children will have to go to college one day—the bigger
the college name, the better—if they are to keep their middle-class
status. These women also understand how to get their kids
college-bound. Educated, middle-class mothers tend to be dedicated to
what I have called The Mission, the careful nurturing of their
children’s cognitive, emotional, and social development, which, if all
goes according to plan, will lead to the honor roll and a spot on the
high school debate team, which will in turn lead to a good college,
then perhaps a graduate or professional degree, which will all lead
eventually to a fulfilling career, a big house in a posh suburb, and a
sense of meaningful accomplishment.
It’s common sense, backed up by plenty of research, that you’ll have
a better chance of fully “developing” your children—that is, of
fulfilling The Mission—if you have a husband around. Children of single
mothers have lower grades and educational attainment than kids who grow
up with married parents, even after controlling for race, family
background, and IQ. Children of divorce are also less likely to
graduate and attend college, and when they do go for a B.A., they tend
to go to less elite schools. Cornell professor Jennifer Gerner was
baffled some years ago when she noticed that only about 10 percent of
her students came from divorced families. She and her colleague Dean
Lillard examined the records of students at the nation’s top 50 schools
and, much to their surprise, found a similar pattern. Children who did
not grow up with their two biological parents, they concluded when they
published their findings, were only half as likely to go to a selective
college. As adults, they also earned less and had lower occupational
status.
To repeat the question: Why do educated women marry before they have
children? Because, like high-status women since status began, they are
preparing their offspring to carry on their way of life. Marriage
radically increases their chances of doing that.
This all points to a deeply worrying conclusion: the Marriage
Gap—and the inequality to which it is tied—is self-perpetuating. A
low-income single mother, unprepared to carry out The Mission, is more
likely to raise children who will become low-income single parents, who
will pass that legacy on to their children, and so on down the line.
Married parents are more likely to be visiting their married children
and their grandchildren in their comfortable suburban homes, and those
married children will in turn be sending their offspring off to good
colleges, superior jobs, and wedding parties. Instead of an
opportunity-rich country for all, the Marriage Gap threatens us with a
rigid caste society.
So what is it about the nuclear family that
makes it work so well for children decades after Americans have
declared it optional? The economists and sociologists who study these
things often answer that question with some variation of what might be
called the strength-in-numbers theory. Kids with two parents are more
likely to have two incomes cushioning them during their developing
years. More money means more stability, less stress, better day care
and health care, more books, more travel, and, most of all, a home in a
good school district—all of which lead to educational and, eventually,
workplace success. A husband and wife can support each other if one is
laid off or if the other wants retraining or more education. They can
take turns caring for the children. Or if they can afford to, they can
specialize: the woman (yes, it’s still almost always the woman) can
take over as homework helper and soccer-team and church-group
chauffeur, while the man earns a salary. According to the
strength-in-numbers theory, then, two parents are better than one much
the way two hands are better than one: they can accomplish more.
But this theory finally doesn’t explain all that much. If two
parents are what make a difference, then why, when a divorced mother
remarries, do her children’s outcomes resemble those of children from
single-parent homes more than they do those from intact families? Why
do they have, on average, lower school grades, more behavior problems,
and lower levels of psychological well-being—even when a stepparent
improves their economic standard of living?
You could posit that children in stepfamilies may well have suffered
through their parents’ divorce or have had a difficult spell in a
single-parent home. But what, then, do we make of cohabiting parents?
Two cohabiting parents also provide few of the benefits for kids that
married couples do. The Urban Institute’s Robert Lerman has found that
even when cohabiters resemble married couples in terms of education,
number of children, and income, they experience more material
hardship—things like an empty pantry or no phone or an electricity
shutoff—and get less help from extended families when they do. And
poverty rates of cohabiting-couple parents are double those of married
couples. (Lerman’s study controls for education, immigration status,
and race.)
Others take an alternative approach to the question of why children
growing up with their own two married parents do better than children
growing up without their fathers. It’s not marriage that makes the
difference for kids, they argue; it’s the kind of people who marry.
Mothers who marry and stay married already have the psychological
endowment that makes them both more effective partners and more
competent parents. After all, we’ve already seen that married mothers
are more likely to be educated and working than single mothers; it
makes sense that whatever abilities allowed them to write their
Economics 101 papers or impress a prospective boss or husband also make
them successful wives and mothers. Many low-income mothers may not have
the skills—or, some would argue, the IQ—that would get them their B.A.
or a good job, and this lack makes them less likely both to marry or
stay married and to raise successful children. “Parents with limited
cultural and material resources are unlikely to remain together in a
stable marriage,” Frank Furstenberg, a famed family researcher, wrote
in Dissent last summer. “Because the possession of such
psychological, human and material capital is highly related to marital
stability, it is easy to confuse the effects of stable marriage with
the effects of competent parenting.”
The problem with this theory is that it
merely tiptoes up to the obvious. There is something fundamentally
different about low-income single mothers and their educated married
sisters. But a key part of that difference is that educated women still believe in marriage as an institution for raising children.
What is missing in all the ocean of research related to the Marriage
Gap is any recognition that this assumption is itself an invaluable
piece of cultural and psychological capital—and not just because it
makes it more likely that children will grow up with a dad in the
house. As society’s bulwark social institution, traditional
marriage—that is, childbearing within marriage—orders social life in
ways that we only dimly understand.
For one thing, women who grow up in a marriage-before-children
culture organize their lives around a meaningful and beneficial life
script. Traditional marriage gives young people a map of life that
takes them step by step from childhood to adolescence to college or
other work training—which might well include postgraduate education—to
the workplace, to marriage, and only then to childbearing. A marriage
orientation also requires a young woman to consider the question of
what man will become her husband and the father of her children as a
major, if not the major, decision of her life. In other words,
a marriage orientation demands that a woman keep her eye on the future,
that she go through life with deliberation, and that she use
self-discipline—especially when it comes to sex: bourgeois women still
consider premature pregnancy a disaster. In short, a marriage
orientation—not just marriage itself—is part and parcel of her
bourgeois ambition.
When Americans announced that marriage before childbearing was
optional, low-income women didn’t merely lose a steadfast partner, a
second income, or a trusted babysitter, as the strength-in-numbers
theory would have it. They lost a traditional arrangement that
reinforced precisely the qualities that they-and their men; let’s not
forget the men!—needed for upward mobility, qualities all the more
important in a tough new knowledge economy. The timing could hardly
have been worse. At a time when education was becoming crucial to
middle-class status, the disadvantaged lost a reliable life script, a
way of organizing their early lives that would prize education and
culminate in childbearing only after job training and marriage. They
lost one of their few institutional supports for planning ahead and
taking control of their lives.
Worst of all, when Americans made marriage optional, low-income
women lost a culture that told them the truth about what was best for
their children. A number of researchers argue that, in fact, low-income
women really do want to marry. They have “white picket dreams,” say
Kathryn Edin and Maria Kefalas in Promises I Can Keep: Why Poor Women Put Motherhood Before Marriage,
and though the men in their lives cannot turn those dreams into
reality, they continue to gaze longingly into the distance at marriage
as a symbol of middle-class stability and comfort. What they don’t
have, however, is a clue about the very fact that orders the lives of
their more fortunate peers: marriage and childbearing belong together.
The result is separate and unequal families, now and as far as the eye
can see.
As family experts find themselves
surrendering to their own research and arguing more and more that
marriage is central to the overall well-being of children, they often
caution that it is not a cure-all. “Is Marriage a Panacea?” is the
illustrative title of a 2003 article in the scholarly journal Social Problems,
and you know the answer to the question without reading a page. No,
shrinking the Marriage Gap may not be a magic potion for ending poverty
or inequality or any other social problem. But it’s hard to see how our
two Americas can become one without more low-income men and women
making their way to the altar.
Marriage may not be a panacea. But it is a sine qua non.
Source: http://www.city-journal.org/html/16_1_marriage_gap.html