What is America’s Most Serious Social Problem?

Fact Sheet No. 1, February 2006

America faces many urgent challenges. Crime. Poverty. Education. And many others. Each is important. But many leading scholars now conclude that our nation’s single most important problem is the weakening of marriage.

  • Today, more than one of every three children is born to a never-married mother.
  • About 45 percent of marriages today end in divorce.
  • Only about 60 percent of U.S. children are living with their own biological (or adoptive)
    married parents.

Why is the decline of marriage so serious?

There are two reasons:

1. The decline of marriage is the problem that drives so many other problems.

Children raised outside of intact marriages are significantly more likely than other children to use drugs … to drop out of school … to commit crimes … to suffer from depression and emotional distress … to be neglected or abused … to be sexually active early … to commit or consider suicide … and later in life to get divorced themselves and to bear children outside of marriage.

The weakening of marriage costs taxpayers billions of dollars — in more jails, welfare payments, medical costs, court costs, remedial education, and juvenile justice systems — and creates untold suffering for millions of children and for society as a whole.

2. Marriage is the good that produces so many other goods.

Marriage is linked to higher levels of health and happiness and lower levels of alcohol and drug abuse for both adults and teens. Marriage is a wealth-creating institution — married people earn more, save more, and build more wealth, compared to people who are single or living together. There is an inverse relationship between marriage and crime — in communities where marriage is common, crime is much less common. Marriage is our most pro-child institution. It is our society’s best arrangement for helping children to thrive.

The New Consensus that Marriage Matters

“A large body of social science research indicates that healthy, married-parent families are an optimal environment for promoting the well-being of children. Children raised by both biological parents are less likely than children raised in single- or step-parent families to be poor, to drop out of school, to have difficulty finding a job, to become teen parents or to experience emotional or behavioral problems.”

— National Council on Family Relations, the nation’s largest organization of family therapists

“Both scholars and politicians now agree that married two-parent families are good for children, and that poverty would be greatly reduced if marriage could be increased.”

— Two policy experts, a Republican and a Democrat, writing for the Brookings Institution

“Children in two-parent families generally had access to more financial resources and greater amounts of parental time. They also were more likely to participate in extracurricular activities, progress more steadily at school, and have more supervision over their activities such as television watching. The presence of two parents continues to be one of the most important factors in children’s lives.”

— U.S. Census Bureau

The Recent Good News

  • Divorce rates today seem to be modestly declining.
  • Teen pregnancy is declining dramatically.
  • Marital happiness, after declining for decades, has stabilized and may be improving.
  • The proportion of Black children living in married-couple homes has risen modestly since1995. The proportion of all U.S. children living in married-couple homes has stabilized and
    may be slightly increasing.

This good news shows that there is nothing inevitable about the decline of marriage. What happens to marriage in the future — whether it fails or thrives — depends on what we do today.

Quotable

“The weakening of marriage is the most important social problem facing America today.”

— James Q. Wilson,
one of the nation’s most acclaimed social scientists

About this Fact Sheet

This fact sheet comes from The Center for Marriage and Families, based at the Institute for American Values. It was published in February 2006. Copies can be printed from the Center’s website at: http://center.americanvalues.org. A PDF version (46 kb, 2 pgs) is also available.

© 2006, Institute for American Values.

Additional Links

Active Relationships Programs

Americans for Divorce Reform

Center for Marriage and Family at Creighton University

Center for the Family (Pepperdine University)

Compassion Power

Defending Holy Matrimony

Dibble Fund for Marriage Education

Divorce Resource Center

Dr. Scott's 365 Reasons to Stay Married

Family Dynamics Institute

First Things First

First Things First of Richmond

Forever Families

Georgia Family Council

Growthtrac

Gruntled Center (Blog)

Healthy Marriages Nashville

Howard Center for Family, Religion, and Society

Institute for Marriage and Public Policy

Institute for the Study of Marriage, Law, and Culture (Canada)

Lasting Love Couples Learning Center

Marriage and Family (Focus on the Family)

Marriage and Family Law Research Grant, Brigham Young University

Marriage Institute

Marriage Law Foundation

Marriage Mentoring Ministries

Marriage Preparation Resources

Marriage Transformation LLC

Married and Loving It!

Married4Good (Blog)

National Fatherhood Initiative

National Healthy Marriage Resource Center

National Institute of Marriage

National Institute of Relationship Enhancement

National Marriage Project (Rutgers University)

Opine Editorials (Blog)

Orange County Marriage Resource Center

P.I.C.K. a Partner

PAIRS

PAIRS for PEERS (PAIRS for youth)

Power of Two Marriage Skills Workshops

Real Relationships

Save The Marriage (Blog)

Secrets of Married Men

Seymour Institute

Successful Stepfamilies

Truemarriage (Blog)

United Families International

Wedded Bliss Foundation

World Congress of Families

American Values Reporter
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