Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Census Bureau: Over 60 percent of U.S. men are fathers

- By Mike Schneider

ORLANDO, Fla. — Fathers in the U.S. tend to be better-educated than men without children, and relatively few men have children over age 40.

These are some of the conclusion­s in a report released this past week by the U.S. Census Bureau, just in time for Father’s Day.

The data in the report come from 2014, when the bureau for the first time asked both men and women about their fertility histories. The goal of the report was to shed greater light on men’s fertility, a topic less known than that of women’s fertility, according to the Census Bureau.

“In recent decades, there has been growing public and academic interest in fathers and fatherhood given the importance of fathers in children’s lives,” the report said.

It found that more than 60 percent of the 121 million adult men in the U.S. were fathers.

About three-quarters of fathers were married. Almost 13 percent of dads were divorced, and 8 percent had never been married.

Just under a quarter of U.S. men between ages 40 and 50 were childless, and about 17 percent had never been married by the time they were in their 40s. Both figures were noticeably higher than for women who had reached middle age.

There were also noticeable difference­s in workforce participat­ion between fathers and mothers with young children. Nearly 90 percent of fathers whose youngest child was under age 6 were employed, while that figure was only around 60 percent for mothers, according to the report. There was no difference between the sexes for childless men and women.

Men with children tended to be more educated than those without kids, though the report noted that may be the result of age since the chances of becoming fathers and reaching higher education levels increase with age.

Almost 30 percent of Hispanics in their 20s were fathers. That was true for about a quarter of black men, more than a fifth of white men and an eighth of Asian men.

By the time men were in their 40s, those disparitie­s had narrowed. More than 83 percent of Hispanics were fathers, around 80 percent of black and Asian men were dads and around three-quarters of white men were fathers.

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