On May 19, 1992, as the presidential campaign season was heating up, Vice President Dan Quayle delivered a family-values speech that came to define him nearly as much as his spelling talents. Speaking at the Commonwealth Club of California, he chided Murphy Brown — the fictional 40-something, divorced news anchor played by Candice Bergen on a CBS sitcom — for her decision to have a child outside of marriage.

“Bearing babies irresponsibly is simply wrong,” the vice president said. “Failing to support children one has fathered is wrong. We must be unequivocal about this. It doesn’t help matters when prime-time TV has Murphy Brown, a character who supposedly epitomizes today’s intelligent, highly paid professional woman, mocking the importance of fathers by bearing a child alone and calling it just another lifestyle choice.”

Quayle’s argument — that Brown was sending the wrong message, that single parenthood should not be encouraged — erupted into a major campaign controversy. And just a few weeks before the ’92 vote, the show aired portions of his speech and had characters react to it.

“Perhaps it’s time for the vice president to expand his definition and recognize that, whether by choice or circumstance, families come in all shapes and sizes,” Bergen’s character said.

Her fictional colleague Frank, meanwhile, echoed some of the national reaction: “It’s Dan Quayle — forget about it!”

Twenty years later, Quayle’s words seem less controversial than prophetic. The number of single parents in America has increased dramatically: The proportion of children born outside marriage has risen from roughly 30 percent in 1992 to 41 percent in 2009. For women under age 30, more than half of babies are born out of wedlock. A lifestyle once associated with poverty has become mainstream. The only group of parents for whom marriage continues to be the norm is the college-educated.

Some argue that these changes are benign. Many children who in the past would have had two married parents could have two cohabiting parents instead. Why should the lack of a legal or religious tie affect anyone’s well-being?

There are three reasons to be concerned about this dramatic shift in family life.

First, marriage is a commitment that cohabitation is not. Taking a vow before friends and family to support another person “until death do us part” signals a mutual sense of shared responsibility that cannot be lightly dismissed. Cohabitation is more fragile — cohabiting parents split up before their fifth anniversary at about twice the rate of married parents. Often, this is because the father moves on, leaving the mother not just with less support but with fewer marriage prospects. For her, marriage requires finding a partner willing to take responsibility for someone else’s kids.

Second, a wealth of research strongly suggests that marriage is good for children. Those who live with their biological parents do better in school and are less likely to get pregnant or arrested. They have lower rates of suicide, achieve higher levels of education and earn more as adults. Meanwhile, children who spend time in single-parent families are more likely to misbehave, get sick, drop out of high school and be unemployed.

It isn’t clear why children who live with their unmarried biological parents don’t do as well as kids who live with married ones. Adults who marry may be different from those who cohabit, divorce or become unwed mothers. Although studies try to adjust for these differences, researchers can’t measure all of them. People in stable marriages may have better relationship skills, for instance, or a greater philosophical or religious commitment to union that improves parenting. Still, raising children is a daunting responsibility. Two committed parents typically have more time and resources to do it well.

Third, marriage brings economic benefits. It usually means two breadwinners, or one breadwinner and a full-time, stay-at-home parent with no significant child-care expenses. Unlike Murphy Brown — who always had the able Eldin by her side — most women do not have the flexibility afforded a presumably highly paid broadcast journalist. And it’s not just a cliche that two can live more cheaply than one; a single set of bills for rent, utilities and other household expenses makes a difference. Though not necessarily better off than a cohabiting couple, a married family is much better off than its single-parent counterpart.

I’ve been studying single mothers since long before “Murphy Brown” was on the air. In a study I co-authored with Adam Thomas, I put them into hypothetical households with demographically similar unmarried men who, in principle, would be good marriage partners. Through this virtual matchmaking, we showed that child poverty rates would fall by as much as 20 percent in an America with more two-parent households.

In later research, Ron Haskins and I learned that if individuals do just three things — finish high school, work full time and marry before they have children — their chances of being poor drop from 15 percent to 2 percent. Mitt Romney has cited this research on the campaign trail, but these issues transcend presidential politics. Stronger public support for single-parent families — such as subsidies or tax credits for child care, and the earned-income tax credit — is needed, but no government program is likely to reduce child poverty as much as bringing back marriage as the preferable way of raising children.

The government has a limited role to play. It can support local programs and nonprofit organizations working to reduce early, unwed childbearing through teen-pregnancy prevention efforts, family planning, greater opportunities for disadvantaged youth or programs to encourage responsible relationships.

But in the end, Dan Quayle was right. Unless the media, parents and other influential leaders celebrate marriage as the best environment for raising children, the new trend — bringing up baby alone — may be irreversible.

Isabel Sawhill is a senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution, where she co-directs the Center on Children and Families. She is a co-author, with Ron Haskins, of “Creating an Opportunity Society.”

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28 Comments

  1. One way to make marriage more fashionable again is to legalize gay marriage, along with the adoption of children by gay parents under the same standards applied to “traditional” couples. One way to reduce the numbers of single-parent families is to make birth control more readily available. It is remarkable that many of the same people professing to be greatly concerned about “family” are the very same people who agitate against making marriage (“the best environment for rasing children”) available to gay couples and against including birth control in standard insurance coverage. Ongoing social change is a given and it is much more effective to try and guide it than to try and stop it. Dan Quayle argued for the latter.

    1.  People do not have children out of wedlock because gay unions are or are not legal. They do it because the gov will care for them when they do. Many kids get out of high school and there “life plan” is to get pregnant to reep the benefits of doing so. You want to stop this then first end all welfare. As soon as people become responsible for there OWN actions they will quickly stop.

      1. yep, all the high school seniors are plotting to start popping out kids as soon as they graduate

      2. Nice spelling…

        Just as the US Constitution guarantees your right to bear arms it also guarantees a number of social insurances and entitlements…including welfare.  If you don’t like the US Constitution then there are plenty of other countries you can move to.

  2. The statement “finish high school, work full time and marry before they have children…chances of being poor drop from 15 percent to 2 percent” says it all, but will it penetrate the thick exterior of liberal ideology and smugness? Doubtful when your prevailing arguments include social promotion, endless government welfare and anti-traditional variations of shacking up.

    1. And if anyone tried to make this argument about Bristol Palin you guys would be screaming bloody murder. Don’t be a hypocrite here. 

        1. Pathetic distinction. You can talk on and on about family values and throw a wide net, but when the hypocrisy is pointed out, you come up with all these little distinctions. It’s ridiculous. Have some principles and credibility, will you? 

          If she wasn’t a Palin or from a wealthy family, she likely would be on welfare or receiving some sort of assistance. 

  3. The article argues that single-parenting is deleterious, not that it has to be.

    The wealth in America has been stolen from the middle class and concentrated in the hands of ultra-rich people who care more about increasing their power than the health of the nation.  For instance, single-parenting would be a lot easier if we had nationalized healthcare and subsidized childcare, like in Germany, Sweden and many other countries.

    1. Maybe men should just “man up”, make the commitment, and get married before having kids!  Isn’t that simple?  

      A complete family is stronger than any of your nationalized, subsidized crap.

      1. “Isn’t that simple?”  If it is, then males are really idiots, because they continue to cheat on and abuse women, not to mention rapes and harassment–and then they laze around the house letting the woman do all the housework while raising the kids and managing her own job.

        Simple to get men to change?  Hell no.

        Oh by the way, Forbes magazine says the happiest countries in the world all have that “subsidized crap”:

        http://www.forbes.com/2011/01/19/norway-denmark-finland-business-washington-world-happiest-countries_print.html

    2. Bull crap! Anyone who makes the decision to have a child out of wedlock is sealing their own fate & that of the child involved.  There is always a choice. It isn’t the fault of the wealthy if someone makes a dumb decision.

  4. Remember this slogan from the ’80s?
    “Make a life for yourself, before you make another life.”

  5. Gee with the divorce rate being as fabulous and high as it is- getting married is no guarentee that there still won’t be single parents- post divorce.   Let’s do the math:  
    married+divorce=single parent 
    unmarried+no divorce= single parent 
    married+ parent dies= single parent.
    they all seem to equal the same thing……clearly cutting planned parenthood, birth control and education regarding safe and responsible sex is the way to go in this country.

    1. married+divorce = child support paid by the non-custodial parent, as it should be

      unmarried+no divorce = single mother using all the taxpayer supported social programs, aka welfare queen

      married+parent dies = life insurance and SS survivor benefits, which were paid into by the deceased parent

      The second option is what leads to poverty for kids, the other two which began with marriage, do not. We as a country need to stop rewarding single moms (never married) for their irresponsible life style choices, along with the baby daddys who can’t keep it in their pants. Turn off all social benefits, annd watch the unwed parent rate rate plummet. Whatever happened to morals, embarrassment, and personal responsibility and accountability?

      1.  those are some wicked neat pigeon holes your using to make your argument.

        too bad the reality based world includes facts of life such as non custodial parents who can’t or won’t pay, single parent households who don’t use public assistance and people who die w/o life insurance

      2. Ummmm first news flash……unmarried + no divorce  = still equals child support (last time I checked women were not getting pregnant all by themselves) being married has nothing to do with the none custodial parent not paying child support at least not in this state.  You play the state of Maine makes sure you pay-as it should be.

        Here’s a second news flash….married + divorce = legal loopholes  (in many instances- not all) a lot of none custodial parents place all assets into new wives/family members names or work under the table in order to not have to include said assets or declared income which are taken into consideration for child support. Some lovely examples: I know a professional man (he has a PhD) who owns his own company he makes $40,000 a year while his second wife (who works at said company) brings home over a $100,000 a year all to make sure he doesn’t have to pay more in child support than his ‘income’ of $40,000 a year- when his son reaches 18- I can guarantee his income will change drastically…..or I know a guy who has a $35,000 bass boat, new truck, new house all in his second wife’s name so it cannot be considered his assets and he works ‘under the table’ thus he only pays $116.00 a week for child support for 2 kids- oh and child care is $80.00 bucks a week which leaves a grand total of $28.00 dollars a weeks for both kids.  (and Mom is no slouch she works full time and has 2 degrees and is not remarried and gets no assistance) Seems fair doesn’t it?   I spend $28.00 every time I buy gas for my car. 

        Third news flash- my parents were married 17 years when my father died when I was 5- he was 42 and my mother was 40.  SS benefits were $420.00 a month and the life insurance policy paid off the house.  And for the record we were never on any type of public assistance (no food stamps, heap, Mainecare, etc) ever…..my mother put herself through college on scholarships and graduated with her Bachelor’s Degree from U-Maine one month before I graduated from high school.  All THAT being said- if you think $420.00 a month of SS benefits goes very far you are sadly misled and completely clueless.  Food, sewer, electric, oil, car, insurances, gas, propane, clothes, taxes, shoes, etc…..is a tad more than $420.00 a month…..you do not live ‘high on the hog’ on SS survivor’s benefits.

        Your scenario of ‘turning off’ all benefits sounds great in theory, but who ultimately pays for the benefits being cut off??…the children do that’s who.  The children did nothing wrong except to be born to two nitwits who were unprepared to be parents…..so what do you propose?? let the kids starve and go homeless in order to teach the nitwit parents a lesson?  Brilliant plan. 

        Here’s a thought….planned parenthood, birth control and sex education regarding protected safe sex in order to avoid an unplanned and unwanted pregnancy to begin with….it’s a little late and ridiculous to punish people after they have already had a child or two or more for being unprepared…..proactive rather than reactive would be a better plan.

        1. One thing. You don’t know what those custodial moms did to their ex husbands. It’s not fair the judge so instantaneously, necuase you do nor have the facts or the full story, and it makes others judge you, for thou doest those things.

          1. You assume to know a lot about what I know- which of course is incorrect.   Ummmm yes I happen to know the ex-wives (as well as current wives) of both the males I offered as examples of and as for what both wives ‘did’ to their ex-husbands was decide they didn’t want to be married to their ex-husbands and decided to leave…..and what does any of THAT have to do with paying your fair share of child support?  In a divorce it takes 2- neither side was perfect wife nor husband.  Having a child takes 2.  Not cheating the system and ultimately your fair share of child support is the point.  Punishing your ex-wife for wanting to leave you because she was unhappy is actually punishing your children.

  6. The trouble is with todays parents of all shapes and sizes is the arrogance of their ways. They have no intention of listening to anyone, any church, or the wisdom of the elderly for good advice. They can spit out a theoretical statistical challenge to every time tested suggestion you offer, then when they fail, the find a new “disease” to blame it on. It’s hard to be humble when your perfect in every way.

  7. It seems to me that many people who consider themselves to be “conservatives” hope to enforce permanent celibacy and childlessness on people who cannot find work.

  8. The number one reason for single mothers is…single mothers! Single mothers are mostly responsible for creating fatherless households and ruining men’s and children’s lives.

    Single motherhood one of the filthy byproducts of feminism and misandry.

    Women who get married and have children have a positive economic incentive to get divorced in order to get child support and alimony. If you want to reduce fatherless households, do this:
    1) Eliminate no fault divorce.
    2) 50-50 child custody upon divorce.

    Since this will never happen, the best thing young men should do is move overseas and marry a woman from a country that has fair divorce laws and child custody laws.

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