The Mercury

Big UK families are rare, but we need them

- Janet Street-Porter

WHAT’S rarer than an orchid in the mall or a nightingal­e at Heathrow? We regularly campaign to protect and save plants, endangered birds and unique buildings, but one institutio­n is fast disappeari­ng from modern society – the big family.

The average unit remains stuck at just under two children and shows little sign of increasing.

The young no longer spawn unwanted babies, thanks to the morning-after pill and better sex education. Modern women are work-oriented, having their first baby later and one in five over 40 are childless.

Just 50 years ago, though, big families were commonplac­e and more than 150 years ago they were the norm.

Queen Victoria’s life has just been turned into a popular ITV drama, but her huge family (nine children, the first born when she was 21, 40 grandchild­ren, and 37 great-grandchild­ren) would be regarded as rather peculiar in modern Britain.

Many people would probably wonder “does this mother belong to a religious sect? Is she super-rich or an immigrant from a culture of extended families?”

Suspicion

In the (predominat­ely white) first world, the big family is often viewed with suspicion. This week attention was drawn to a family in Luton who have turned down the offer of a council house with five bedrooms for their eight children.

We do not know the details of their circumstan­ces, but the parents originally came from Cameroon and settled in France. He is a trainee mental health nurse studying and working part-time for the NHS, and as an EU citizen is entitled to claim housing benefits.

Mr Sube is entitled to reject the home made available by his local council, but I very much doubt he will be offered anything larger. It is the size of his family that has attracted negative comment and it’s interestin­g to examine why.

In the last couple of years, the number of families with more than four children has started to rise in the UK, to one of the highest levels in the EU. Analysts put the increase down to immigratio­n and the overall number of children remains small. The average British family still consists of one or at best two kids, with the cost of childcare and housing given as the main reasons.

Big families are popular with the very rich, and for the pretty poor a large brood is an acceptable (and even revered) way of displaying your affluence, with David Beckham and Jamie Oliver fathering four and five kids respective­ly.

High-profile women like Angelina Jolie and Madonna both opted to adopt and enlarge their families to reinforce their credential­s as “earth mothers”.

That’s far from the norm: two thirds of British parents say they cannot afford to have a second baby.

Are people also limiting their families because they are brainwashe­d into giving their children a bedroom of their own, and far more space than kids got 50 years ago? Most of my contempora­ries grew up sharing bedrooms with siblings until they were teenagers or left home. These days, parents want the best for their children, and that is understand­able.

But perhaps they are guilty of feather-bedding their offspring.

Surveys show that the happiest families are those with three or four children, not those with single siblings with their own bedroom and loads of gadgets.

Mr Sube and his family are probably very content and (with an ageing population and low birth rate) those kids will be an essential part of the UK’s work force in the coming years.

The Tories might want to limit benefits to people with just two kids, but that’s not exactly a cause worth fighting – more a crowd-pleasing statement of intent which will produce meagre financial gains. The truth is our economy needs large families. – The Independen­t

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