If we assume an average household of 3, that is around 13.3M.
Oooh. Is this the place where we
get to point out 65% of black/African American households are single-parent? Which translates into 6,123,000M (children?) in single-parent households? Vs, say, 556,000 Asian/Pacific Islander kids in single parent households (15%), or 41% of Hispanic/Latino kids (7,283,000) or 24% of non-Hispanic white kids in single parent households (8,623,000).
So, even if we’re assuming a household of 3… what happens when it’s just a single-income mom, plus two schoolkids?
In 2006, 67% of white women in the US between the ages of 25-54 were married, vs 34% of black/African American women in the same age range.
In 2009, 42% of black/African American women were never married at all.
By 2016, only 29% of black/African Americans were married, and 48% of black/African American women had never been married.
However, up until 1970, black women were more likely to be married than white women were…
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I think that’s a very critical piece of the puzzle. If you’re totally on your own, you need to be a very high earner in order to not just take care of your immediate needs and wants, but also have enough left over for saving up. Frequently, these days, we depend on having a double-income in order to do that, although it’s certainly not the only way. But if you don’t have a solid partner to team up with… homeownership is a very distant and unlikely ambition.
So-- perhaps there ought to be more emphasis on traditional values and the cultivation of moral virtues (avoiding drugs, chastity, etc) and marriage — and that will solve a few social problems that will lead to a better economic situation for a particular demographic that’s disproportionately susceptible to incarceration, out-of-wedlock kids, high abortion rates, job loss, and so on.
During the dot-com bust, I remember being a paycheck away from homelessness. That wasn’t where we wanted to be— so you bet we spent the next 10 years working to put ourselves in a better situation. We’ve done well, but it wasn’t an easy road.