Study: Single parents cost taxpayers $112 billion

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NEW YORK (AP) -- Divorce and out-of-wedlock childbearing cost U.S. taxpayers more than $112 billion a year, according to a study commissioned by four groups advocating more government action to bolster marriages.

Sponsors say the study is the first of its kind and hope it will prompt lawmakers to invest more money in programs aimed at strengthening marriages. Two experts not connected to the study said such programs are of dubious merit and suggested that other investments -- notably job creation -- would be more effective in aiding all types of needy families.

There have been previous attempts to calculate the cost of divorce in America. But the sponsors of the new study, being released Tuesday, said theirs is the first to gauge the broader cost of "family fragmentation" -- both divorce and unwed childbearing.

The study was conducted by Georgia State University economist Ben Scafidi. His work was sponsored by four groups who consider themselves part of a nationwide "marriage movement" -- the New York-based Institute for American Values, the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy, Families Northwest of Redmond, Washington, and the Georgia Family Council, an ally of the conservative ministry Focus on the Family.

"The study documents for the first time that divorce and unwed childbearing -- besides being bad for children -- are costing taxpayers a ton of money," said David Blankenhorn, president of the Institute for American Values.

"We keep hearing this from state legislators, 'Explain to me why this is any of my business? Aren't these private matters?"' Blankenhorn said. "Take a look at these numbers and tell us if you still have any doubt."

Scafidi's calculations were based on the assumption that households headed by a single female have relatively high poverty rates, leading to higher spending on welfare, health care, criminal justice and education for those raised in the disadvantaged homes. The $112 billion estimate includes the cost of federal, state and local government programs, and lost tax revenue at all levels of government.

Reducing these costs, Scafidi said, "is a legitimate concern of government, policymakers and legislators."

While the study doesn't offer formal recommendations, it does suggest that state and federal lawmakers consider investing more money in programs intended to bolster marriages. Such a program has been in place in Oklahoma since 2001; Texas last year earmarked about $15 million in federal funds for marriage education.

"Because of the very large taxpayer costs associated with high rates of divorce and unwed childbearing, and the modest price tags associated with most marriage-strengthening initiatives ... programs even with very modest success rates will be cost-effective," the study says.

But Tim Smeeding, an economics professor at the Maxwell School of Syracuse University, who was not involved in the study, said he's seen no convincing evidence that the marriage-strengthening programs work.

"I have nothing against marriage -- relationship-building is great," he said. "But alone it's not going to do the job. A full-employment economy would probably be the best thing -- decent, stable jobs."

He also noted the distinctive problems arising in black urban areas where the rate of single-mother households is highest.

"A high number of African-American men have been in prison -- that limits their future earning potential and makes them bad marriage partners, regardless of what kind of person they are," Smeeding said. "A marriage program doesn't address that problem at all."

Another expert not connected to the study, University of Michigan sociologist Pamela Smock, suggested that bigger investments in education would pay long-term dividends -- improving economic prospects even for children from fragmented, disadvantaged families.

"Providing a global number doesn't give us anything to go on," said Smock, who was skeptical of the study's $112 billion estimate.

"We're now nearing 40 percent of kids in America born out of wedlock," she said. "I can't fathom that those marriage programs, even with increased investment, are going to reduce that."

Blankenhorn said it was "fair criticism" to note that the study made multiple references to marriage-strengthening programs while not proposing other strategies for reducing the cost of family fragmentation.

"Maybe we should have been more ecumenical," he said. "Let everybody have their say. Let's try things out. ... Nobody knows exactly the strategies which are going to work."

http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/personal/04/15/fragmented.families.ap/index.html?eref=rss_mostpopular
 
Yep it costs a lot of money, I know of several kids around here who do not get married on purpose so medicaid will pay for the childs birth and medical care. How else will the child get care. And I know don't have the child, yeah right like talking to rocks these kids.

Universal healthcare would fix much of it, but would not be cheap either.
 
I think the biggest problem is that MOST of the people having children out of wedlock and not getting married are already lower income people. A child just compounds that problem.
 
Here is something that really showcases the differences between the left and the right. Let's bypass the unwed parents because that is a lightning rod for sexual judgement. This study is about unwed parents AND divorced parents.

Massachusetts has the lowest divorce rate in the nation, and the highest divorce rates are to be found in the bible belt, with states such as Alabama and Missisippi leading the pack.

I think the left would look at that and rather than making a moral judgement on the Southern states (as they do on northern states), will say, well, that's going to correlate closely with poverty rates. I don't think it takes a genius to know that financial stresses strangle relationships. And of course, there have also been studies showing a lower divorce rate among the higher educated.

So, you take married couples, already in financial stress, and then they divorce, and now you have two people living in poverty, and raising children. So of course they are going to utilize the social safety net.

Basically, how a liberal would approach this is, pull people out of poverty and right off you are going to save some of those marriages. What the right is going to say is, let's spend millions in an attempt to force people to stay married. They are no less likely than the left to spend tax-payer dollars. It all comes down to; who is spending it wisely. To me, it's a no-brainer.
 
I wonder if the New York-based Institute for American Values, the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy, Families Northwest of Redmond, Washington, and the Georgia Family Council, an ally of the conservative ministry Focus on the Family -- the sponsors of the study -- know anyone that can provide "marriage-strengthening programs" and accept federal funding for the same.

Anyone?
 
Free birth control to anyone who asks for it.

Free condoms and more research into male contraception.

You can not tell people how to live their lives folks. They can have sex withwhoever is willing to have sex with them. If they all had Free birth control you would see alot less kids to unmarrieds.
 
Saw this. Hate it. Don't know how how to fix it.

The brute-force method, would be to eliminate the government socialism that causes us to pay for other people's out-of-wedlock children (whether never-married, or divorced, or etc.). If they know that they'll have to look actual people in the eye, day after day, month after month, and beg for their kids' food and medical care, they may be a little less likely to have those kids, than if they KNOW they can simply fill out a faceless govt form and get money from distant, remote, hardworking taxpayers for them.

"A little less likely", but not much. Biggest problem is unmarried people not keeping their pants zipped and/or knees together. You can't "force" them to do that, obviously.

Though the "old-style" was far from perfect in previous times (women pregnant outside marriage were shunned and castigated, but the men who got them pregnant were only sometimes shunned), pregnancies outside of marriage happened far less often than they do today. And there were usually strong families to take care of the pregnancy, and/or use social pressure to persuade the guy to marry the woman who was carrying his child.

Our brethern of the leftist persuasion have long derided "old-style morals" that insist on no sex outside of marriage. And they have largely succeeded in removing the stigma of unmarried pregnancy. And through their avid encouragement of "Welfare" that pays more and more for women who have more babies, they have largely removed the need for fathers (real ones) to contribute to the support of the woman and their child, thus helping to destroy what used to be strong families. They even called this "progressive".

Today we are seeing the results of their "progressive" agenda: more and more babies being born out of wedlock, or killed in the womb, or even thrown into trash bins and toilets upon birth. Those that survive are being raised mostly in abject poverty and neglect.

I don't have an easy solution to this. Going back to the system of morals that insisted upon marriage as a condition on making whoopee, and a moral imperative to marry upon unwed couples who conceived a child, so that social pressure rather than government "forced" them to do the right thing, would be a step in the right direction. Even better if, with modern DNA-identification now available, the father of an unborn child could be positively identified and subjected to the full pressure of a moral society to do that right thing. It might help him to keep his pants zipped a little longer if he didn't want to get married; and if not, it would at least get the kid some responsible spoonsors even if they were incapable of being good parents.

Open question: If the father of an unborn child can be positively identified, should government force him to marry the mother? Maybe even with a ten-year ban on divorce? Pretty extreme - government can't create responsiblility in people who didn't have it to start with.

The purpose of government is to protect people's fundamental rights. And the unborn child is a person too, who will need those rights as much or even more than adults. Might this be an area where conservatives urge government to step in?

If such a law were in place, how many males would try harder to keep their pants zipped (females too)? And of the ones that didn't, how many soon-to-be-born children would eventually be better off?

This is certainly not a "perfect" solution - we won't have that, until we have perfect people. But given that all solutions have flaws, which is the least bad?
 
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The brute-force method, would be to eliminate the government socialism that causes us to pay for other people's out-of-wedlock children. If they know that they'll hav to look actual people in the eye and beg for their kids' food and medical care, they may be a little less likely to have those kids, than if they KNOW they can simply fill out a faceless govt form and get money for them.

"A little less likely", but not much. Biggest problem is unmarried people not keeping their pants zipped and/or knees together. You can't "force" them to do that, obviously.

Though the "old-style" was far from perfect (women pregnant outside marriage were shunned and castigated, but the men who got them pregnant were only sometimes shunned), pregnancies outside of marriage happened far less often than they do today. And there were usually strong families to take care of the pregnancy, and/or use social pressure to persuade the guy to marry the woman who was carrying his child.

Our brethern of the leftist persuasion have long derided "old-style morals" that insist on no sex outside of marriage. And they have largely succeeded in removing the stigma of unmarried pregnancy. And through their avid encouragement of "Welfare" that pays more and more for women who have more babies, they have largely removed the need for fathers (real ones) to contribute to the support of the woman and their child. They even called this "progressive".

Today we are seeing the results of their "progressive" agenda: more and more babies being born out of wedlock, or killed in the womb, or even thrown into trash bins and toilets upon birth.

I don't have an easy solution to this. Going back to the system of morals that insisted upon marriage as a condition on making whoopee, and a moral imperative to marry upon unwed couples who conceived a child, so that social pressure rather than government "forced" them to do the right thing, would be a step in the right direction. Even better if, with modern DNA-identification now available, the father of an unborn child could be positively identified and subjected to the full pressure of a moral society to do that right thing. It might help him to keep his pants zipped a little longer if he didn't want to get married; and if not, it would at least get the kid some responsible spoonsors even if they were incapable of being good parents.

Open question: If the father of an unborn child can be positively identified, should government force him to marry the mother? Maybe even with a ten-year ban on divorce? Pretty extreme - government can't create responsiblility in people who didn't have it to start with.

The purpose of government is to protect people's fundamental rights. And the unborn child is a person too, who will need those rights as much or even more than adults. Might this be an area where conservatives urge government to step in?

If such a law were in place, how many males would try harder to keep their pants zipped (females too)? And of the ones that didn't, how many soon-to-be-born children would eventually be better off?


This is certainly not a "perfect" solution - we won't have that, until we have perfect people. But given that all solutions have flaws, which is the least bad?


Little Acorn is just another small government conservative type I see.
 
1957 saw the largest rate of teen pregnancy in US history. Granted they weren't born out of wedlock, we FORCED them to get married. Unintended consequences? A skyrocketing divorce rate in the 70's and 80's. I don't think there is ANY real solution. Cutting the parents off is cutting the children off. So much for every child a gift. We can't do that either.
 
Free birth control to anyone who asks for it.

Free condoms and more research into male contraception.

You can not tell people how to live their lives folks. They can have sex withwhoever is willing to have sex with them. If they all had Free birth control you would see alot less kids to unmarrieds.

Castration works good for men. As birth control. It was in a study.
 
Yeah but it makes the package just so less handsome dont you think?

Lets not go destroying our enjoyment when we can just snip snip and still leave the the beauty intact.
 
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