Poll: Fewer people see kids as key to a good marriage
By David Crary, Associated Press
July 1, 2007
NEW YORK — The percentage of Americans who consider children “very important” to a successful marriage has dropped sharply since 1990, and more now cite the sharing of household chores as pivotal, according to a sweeping new survey.
The Pew Research Center survey on marriage and parenting found that children had fallen to eighth out of nine on a list factors that people associate with successful marriages— well behind “sharing household chores,” “good housing,” “adequate income,” a “happy sexual relationship” and “faithfulness.”
In a 1990 World Values Survey, children ranked third in importance among the same items, with 65% saying children were very important to a good marriage. Just 41% said so in the new Pew survey.
Chore-sharing was cited as very important by 62% of respondents, up from 47% in 1990.
The survey also found that, by a margin of nearly 3-to-1, Americans say the main purpose of marriage is the “mutual happiness and fulfillment” of adults rather than the “bearing and raising of children.”
The survey’s findings buttress concerns expressed by numerous scholars and family-policy experts, among them Barbara Dafoe Whitehead 0f Rutgers University’s National Marriage Project.
“The popular culture is increasingly oriented to fulfilling the X-rated fantasies and desires of adults,” she wrote in a recent report. “Childrearing values—sacrifice, stability, dependability, maturity—seem stale and musty by comparison.”
Virginia Rutter, a sociology professor at Framingham (Mass.) State College and board member of the Council on Contemporary Families, said the shifting views may be linked in part to America’s relative lack of family-friendly workplace policies such as paid leave and subsidized child care.
“If we value families…we need to change the circumstances they live in,” she said, citing the challenges faced by young, two-earner couples as they ponder having children.
The Pew survey was conducted by telephone from mid-February through mid-March among a random, nationwide sample of 2,020 adults. Its margin of error is 3 percentage points.
Among the scores of questions in the survey, many touched on America’s high rate of out-of-wedlock births and of cohabitation outside of marriage.
The survey noted that 37% of U.S. births in 2005 were to unmarried women, up from 5% in 1960, and found that nearly half of all adults in their 30s and 40s had lived with a partner outside of marriage.
According to the survey, 71% of Americans say the growth in births to unwed mothers is a “big problem.” About the same proportion—69%— said a child needs both a mother and a father to grow up happily.
Breaking down the responses, the survey found some predictable patterns—Republicans and older people were more likely to give conservative answers than Democrats and younger adults. But the patterns in regard to race and ethnicity were more complex.
For example, Census statistics show that blacks and Latinos are more likely than whites to bear children out of wedlock. Yet according to the survey, these minority groups are more inclined than whites to place a high value on the importance of children to a successful marriage.
The survey found that more than 80% of white adults have been married, compared with about 70% of Latinos and 54% of blacks. Yet blacks were more likely than whites and Latinos to indicate that engaging in premarital sex is always or almost always morally wrong.
Among those who have ever been married, blacks (38%) and whites (34%) were more likely than Latinos (23%) to have been divorced.
Delving into one of the nation’s most divisive social issues, the survey also found that 57% of the American public opposes allowing gays and lesbians to marry.
However, opinion was almost evenly divided on support for civil unions that would give same-sex couples many of the same rights as married couples.
Asked about the trend of more same-sex couples who are raising children, 50% said this is bad for society, 11% said it is good, and 34% said it made little difference.
By David Crary, Associated Press
Reprinted from Santa Barbara News Press, July 1, 2007