PRESS RELEASE
October 24, 2005
Contact: Alex Roberts
Institute for American Values
(212) 246-3942
aroberts@americanvalueMajor New Study:
The Consequences of Marriage for African Americans
(New York, NY) A newly released study by a team of family scholars
estimates that marriage typically brings a host of important benefits to
African American men, women, and children. On average, married African
Americans are wealthier, happier, and choose healthier behaviors than
their unmarried peers, and their children typically fare better in
life—differences that indeed seem to stem largely from marriage itself.
At the same time, however, African American women tend to benefit from
marriage less than Whites and men. These are among the key findings
presented in The Consequences of Marriage for African Americans,
a first-of-its-kind report based on reviews of 125 social science
articles and a new statistical analysis of national survey data. The
study was conducted under the auspices of the Institute for American
Values, a nonpartisan think-tank based in New York City.
According to Dr. Linda Malone-Colon, one of the report's authors:
“This groundbreaking study of African American marriage offers more
hard evidence of what most black people (and white people) already
know in their hearts—that marriage matters, that marriage is literally
good for the health and well-being of men, women and children.
Furthermore this important study offers comprehensive evidence that
efforts to strengthen African American marriages in our country are an
important means to improving the life conditions of African Americans.
More specifically, this report highlights the need for increasing
societal supports (for those black women and men who wisely seek
marriages) that will help them to achieve marriages characterized by
true love, honor, respect, heartfelt mutual support and unconditional
commitment.”
The study comes after decades of controversy surrounding the Black
family. For years, intellectuals have debated the importance of marriage
and “family breakdown” for Black Americans, but have generally lacked a
comprehensive, data-based understanding of the consequences of marriage
for African Americans. The new report begins to fill that knowledge gap.
Findings
- One major finding of the study is that marriage seems to
be highly beneficial for African American males throughout the life
course. For example, when African American boys live with
their father in the home, particularly their married father, they
typically receive substantially more parental support. As a result of
this better parenting, African American boys with married parents are
markedly less likely to become delinquent and they also tend to do
better in school. In adulthood, marriage is associated with a range of
better outcomes for African American men, from $4,000 increases in
wages to greater happiness with family life.
- African American females also appear to derive very
important benefits from marriage, but these apparent benefits are
smaller than those for males.
- Another striking finding is that marriage is profoundly
important to the economic well-being of Black families. Study
after study consistently concludes that marriage is one of the
strongest determinants of economic status for Black Americans, and can
often mean the difference between living above or below the poverty
line – especially for families with children. Why? Because marriage
often means the addition of a second income to the household and it
also tends to make adults more productive, successful workers.
Importantly, these marriage benefits appear to be quite strong and
significant even when studies control for other variables that may
commonly affect marital status and the outcome variables and even when
studies use longitudinal analysis. The evidence is therefore strong that
marriage typically brings important benefits to African Americans.
Among the other key findings presented in the report:
- There are racial differences in the consequences of
marriage. All in all, Black women appear to receive a smaller
marriage premium than White women. Black men appear to receive a
smaller marriage premium only in terms of their satisfaction with
family life. A major reason for these differentials is that marriages
of African Americans are, on average, of lower quality than those of
Whites.
- Racial differences in the prevalence of “very happy”
marriages are apparently central to overall racial differences in
well-being. Racial differences in the prevalence of “very
happy” marriages statistically explain a substantial portion of
overall racial differences in well-being. For example, African
American adults on average report being less happy than White adults,
and about 50 percent of this racial difference is statistically
explained the fact that fewer African Americans are in very happy
marriages. In contrast, only 11 percent of the racial happiness gap is
explained by persons’ perceptions of their economic rank.
- Marriage appears to inhibit crime. As local
marriage rates increase in Black communities, violent crime decreases.
- Parental marriage shapes child well-being. Having
married parents seems to be a surprisingly important promoter of
infant health among African Americans. In the teenage years, having
married parents apparently protects against early sexual debut and
pregnancy.
Recommendations
Based on these findings, the study offers some general recommendations,
including:
- Marriage clearly matters for African Americans. There is strong
evidence that it is a vital source of economic security and greater
psychosocial well-being. Policies geared towards increasing marriage
rates in the African American community—particularly the number of
high quality marriages—are likely to substantially increase the
well-being of African American men, women, and children. They should
also help to close the racial gap in positive outcomes. Obviously,
such policies should not be coercive, but concerns about coercion
should not dominate the public policy debate because almost
four-fifths of unmarried Black adults say they would like to be
married.
- Policies seeking to increase marriage rates and marital quality
among African Americans should focus on tax reform, reducing domestic
violence, providing culturally-relevant marital education and
counseling, and numerous other efforts outlined in the report. In view
of the fact that the low prevalence of good marriages among African
Americans grows in large measure out of a scarcity of marriageable
men, these policies should also include job training, efforts to
improve African American education, and efforts to reduce the
incarceration of young African American men for drug offenses. The
latter should include both efforts to reduce drug offenses and more
constructive sentencing practices.
- Researchers should devote more attention to studying and
understanding the role marriage plays in the lives of African American
men, women, and children. As part of this effort, researchers should
be careful to use precise family structure categories. They should
also carry out their analyses separately for men and women, boys and
girls, since each of these groups appears to be affected by marriage
in unique ways.
About the Authors
The Consequences of Marriage for African Americans was
written by Lorraine Blackman of Indiana University; Obie Clayton of
Morehouse College; Norval Glenn of the University of Texas at Austin,
Linda Malone-Colon of Hampton University and the National Healthy
Marriage Resource Center; and Alex Roberts of the Institute for American
Values.
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