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Marriage Markets - How Inequality is Remaking the American Family (Hardcover)
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Marriage Markets - How Inequality is Remaking the American Family (Hardcover)
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Over the past four decades, the American family has undergone a
radical transformation. Skyrocketing rates of divorce, single
parenthood, and couples with children out of wedlock have all
worked to undermine an idealized family model that took root in the
1950s and has served as a beacon for traditionalists ever since.
But what are the causes of this change? Conservatives blame it on
moral decline and women's liberation. Progressives often attribute
it to women's greater freedom and changing sexual mores, but they
typically paint these trends in a positive light. In Family
Classes, Naomi Cahn and June Carbone contend that these views miss
the forest for the trees. Armed with authoritative evidence, they
show that the changing structure of our economy is the root cause
of the transformation, and that working class and poorer families
have paid the highest price. Increasing inequality and instability
in the labor market over the past three decades has had a
disproportionately negative impact on family stability and marriage
rates among working-class and lower-income Americans. In
particular, the decline of stable blue collar jobs for men has
upended the labor market in the lower deciles of the income chart.
Conversely, educated middle class Americans now have the highest
rates of both marriage and marital stability despite the fact that
they are relatively unlikely to espouse 'traditional values.' In
fact, their family stability rate appears to be increasing. That is
important because the children of stable two-parent families really
do have a leg up in life. They draw from truly fascinating
sociological data to drive home their point that economic factors
weigh heaviest. For instance, when eligible (i.e., desirable and
marriageable) men outnumber eligible women, the marriage and
marital stability rates are significantly higher than when the
reverse situation occurs - the exact situation we have in America
today. Among the educated middle classes, eligible men outnumber
eligible women in the area that truly matters-high incomes-and
people in that strata therefore have far more stable family lives
than working class and poorer Americans. In these latter sectors,
men have lost economic ground vis-a-vis women, and family lives
have become increasingly unstable in the last two decades.
Interestingly, religion and moral values are insignificant factors
in generating this difference in comparison to class. To make
families stronger, then, we need to increase the level of economic
stability in the bottom half of the population. The authors close
with a series of policy proposals to address the family-related
problems that flow from economic instability. A rigorous and
enlightening account of why American families have changed so much
since the 1960s, Family Classes cuts through the ideological and
moralistic rhetoric that drives our current debate.
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