Over half of all births to young adults in the United States now
occur outside of marriage. A large proportion are unplanned. These
facts suggest that today's young adults are drifting into
relationships and are often unprepared for parenthood. What kind of
future does this mean for their kids and for society as a
whole?
In "Generation Unbound," Isabel V. Sawhill discusses likely
causes for recent changes in the family, such as an increase in
women's economic opportunities, the declining economic prospects of
men, greater access to birth control and abortion, and new social
norms that allow young people more choice --but provide less
guidance on what it means to be an adult.
Isabel V. Sawhill reveals an emerging class divide in patterns
of marriage and childbearing: at the top of the ladder are
"planners," who are marrying and having children only after
establishing a career; at the bottom, and increasingly in the
middle, are "drifters" who are having unplanned children early,
outside of marriage, and without the stable support of a second
parent. This divide is contributing to rising inequality and less
social mobility in the U.S.
Isabel V. Sawhill sees merit in the views of those on the
political left, who argue for more social supports for the less
advantaged, including more educational opportunities, expanded
child care, parental leave, family-friendly workplaces, and
financial assistance. She also agrees with those on the right who
argue for traditional marriage as the best environment for raising
children. But, she argues that public policies aimed at restoring
marriage have not worked and that existing social supports cannot
keep pace with an ongoing tide of childbearing outside of marriage.
Instead, she points to a third way: greater personal responsibility
among potential parents themselves. Drawing on new insights from
behavioral economics, and the promise of new long-acting
contraceptives, she suggests a future in which more children will
be born to adults who want and are prepared to be parents.
Contents
1. An Introduction
2. Changes in the Family: More Diversity, a Bigger Divide
3. Why We Should Worry: The Consequences of Choices about
Marriage and Childbearing
4. A Growing Class Divide: Planners vs. Drifters
5. The Traditionalists vs. the Villagers: Why Government Alone
Can't Solve the Marriage Problem
6. Making Better Decisions: The Need to Change the Default
7. Peering into the Future: Less Marriage, Fewer Children?
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