That the fall out is critical to the success of the offspring doesn't seem to change the minds of the politicians and 'do-gooders' leaves a bad taste in everyone mouths. It also seems the call to do something positive for the next generation to succeed will be a good idea seeing how past legislation has been a failure to stem the problem.
The real failure will become all to obvious when the next generation finds itself on the welfare roles as their parents were or in jail. Just kicking the can down the road is not an option.
57 Percent of Young Mothers Unmarried
Source: Rachel Sheffield, "A Majority of Young Adults Are Having Kids Outside Marriage. Why That Hurts Kids' Futures," Daily Signal, June 21, 2014
June 26, 2014
An increasing number of young women are unmarried when they have their first child, explains Rachel Sheffield, policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation. Indeed, a recent study from Johns Hopkins University found that 57 percent of mothers between 26 and 31 years old are unmarried at the time of the birth of their first child.
In particular, whether the mother has received a college education seems to be a main factor in separating unmarried from married mothers:
In particular, whether the mother has received a college education seems to be a main factor in separating unmarried from married mothers:
- Sixty-three percent of births to women without a high school degree occur outside of marriage.
- But for college-educated women, less than 30 percent of births occur outside of marriage.
- Children are five times more likely to experience poverty when born into single-parent homes.
- The likelihood of falling into poverty is not one that can be chalked up to the parents' lower education levels, writes Sheffield, as parents with low levels of education are far less likely to experience poverty if they are married.
- Additionally, children of married parents are more likely to graduate from high school and college, less likely to engage in delinquency and less likely to become single parents.
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