Texarkana Gazette

Want to succeed in life? Marriage could be key

- Lynn Schmidt TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Around Valentine’s Day, love is certainly in the air. Society would surely benefit if marriage was in the atmosphere too. Compelling data shows that strong families, which include married parents, make for safer communitie­s and a more robust economy.

A report by the Home Economics Project, a research effort of the American Enterprise Institute and the Institute for Family Studies, explored whether and how strong and stable families advance the economic welfare of children, adults and the nation as a whole. They found that states that have strong and stable families, especially as measured by the share of families headed by married parents, are more likely to show high levels of growth, economic mobility and median family income. They also tend to have lower levels of child poverty.

Violent crime is much less common in the states with larger shares of families headed by married parents, even after controllin­g for a range of socio-demographi­c factors at the state level. The violent crime rate (violent crimes per 100,000 people) sits at 343 on average for states in the top quintile of married parenthood, whereas those in the bottom quintile average a rate of 563.

These higher crime rates impact the quality of life and real living standards and are associated with lower levels of economic growth and mobility. This can perpetuate the cycle of poverty disproport­ionately in minority neighborho­ods.

Their research also shows that young men from single-mother homes are about twice as likely to spend some time in jail or prison as young men from intact, married homes, even after controllin­g for family income and parents’ education, race/ ethnicity, and age. Similar disparitie­s are evident in criminal victimizat­ion, with one study finding that youths from single parent and stepfamili­es experience­d higher rates of crime victimizat­ion compared with youths living with two biological parents, even after accounting for victims’ age, gender, race, family size, and socioecono­mic status.

The statistics are clear. Communitie­s with greater numbers of single-parent homes have higher levels of crime and violence than communitie­s with a higher concentrat­ion of two-parent families. Harvard sociologis­t Robert Sampson wrote, “Family structure is one of the strongest, if not the strongest, predictors of … urban violence across cities in the United States.”

He and others conducted a study to assess in a non-ideologica­l and rigorous manner the causal relationsh­ip between marriage and crime. They found that being married is associated with a significan­t reduction in the probabilit­y of crime, averaging approximat­ely 35%. The findings were robust and consistent with the notion that marriage causally inhibits crime over the life course.

A potential road map to economic prosperity and increased safety may come in the shape of a triangle. This triangle of achievemen­t is called the “success sequence” and is a formula to help young adults succeed. The formula involves three steps: get at least a high school education, work full time, and marry before having children.

Among millennial­s, people born between the early 1980s and late 1990s, who followed this sequence, 97% are not poor when they reach adulthood. The link remains strong when this cohort of young Americans reaches their mid-30s, according to one study. Racial and ethnic gaps in poverty become nearly nonexisten­t among young adults who followed all three steps.

Young adults who follow the sequence, even those who face structural disadvanta­ges, are much more likely to achieve the American dream, or at least make a better life for themselves. Young adults from disadvanta­ged circumstan­ces who follow the sequence are markedly more likely to overcome challenges and achieve economic success.

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