There are feedback effects here. **When most women don’t signal their readiness for marriage in their 20’s, many men pick up on those signals and don’t bother to work hard enough to prepare themselves either. **And that persists through their respective 20’s. Student loans and job availability compound the problem with their sizable influence in discouraging preparation efforts. Now the typical career woman is in her 30’s and listening to her clock, but not enough men caught up. Or else they don’t want any part of her. Peter Pan gets attacked vociferously here and elsewhere, but many attackers miss that most Peter Pan men see their lifestyle as a rational response to the far less forgiving environment they find themselves in our current culture. Personally, I did the hard work, I once regularly disrespected others who didn’t; now I sympathize with them more than I used to though their ways will never be my ways.
[snip]
The current statistics on college enrollment are spelling future disaster for a lot of women because most women will not marry down and then they have the gall to complain there are no available men. No sympathy here. Men don’t marry down as much as they used to either as there is too much financial risk involved. So marriage is becoming stratified by class as well, not as much mixing as there used to be.
If the median US woman who gets married is doing so at 27, is it really fair to say that “most women don’t signal their readiness for marriage in their 20’s”?
dailydot.com/irl/average-age-marriage-by-state/
One thing that really pops out at me looking at the state-by-state list is the close relationship between cost of living and median age at first marriage (with some anomalies). It’s if anything a bit of a miracle that Massachusetts couples marry as early as they do with the median home there now costing over $400k (and $560k in Boston). Even just a 10% downpayment would require scratching up $40k.
Realistically, could a 22-year-old couple manage that without substantial help from the Bank of Mom and Dad?
So, yes, young couples in high cost of living areas really do need to get their ducks on a row before settling down, if they ever want to own a home, and that is particularly the case if they are young Catholics who may well wind up having a new baby every other year for the foreseeable future.
Even in blessedly moderate cost of living TX, the median home now costs about $170k (the US median is about $189k). Again, that means that the Texas couple needs to have $17k cash just for the downpayment, while nationally, the median couple needs about $19k just for the downpayment.
The Practical Conservative has written a lot on the subject of women and college. Basically, it’s very hard these days for non-college women to get married.
thepracticalconservative.wordpress.com/2017/05/23/college-educated-women-are-having-all-the-babies-these-days/
“Women who have some college education and especially who are married have a majority of the kids these days (since 2007). This is kinda true even among black women, the college educated ones have a significantly lower OOW percentage and also represent a supermajority of married births since 2007. And with white women, percent married and percent college educated are identical shares of their total births since 2007, about 70% each.”
" The only ladder left is the college one and if a woman at least jumps for a rung and falls down with a busted rung of credits without the credential, she still has a better chance of getting married before the babies come than if she never tries.
“So telling women in aggregate to not “do college” or complaining about them taking classes and not managing to finish enough for a degree is in effect saying that you don’t want kids, plural, in wedlock, to remain the bulk of births.”
Basically, for the average (non-Amish) US woman, there isn’t a trustworthy road to marriage that doesn’t involve college. It is very, very difficult for a woman to get married in the contemporary US without education and at least some sort of attempt at a career. And that goes double or triple for black women.
A woman who is a decent earner/has a good education can both support herself and has a good shot at marriage. A woman who doesn’t have either education or a decent career is up a creek, both with regard to supporting herself and marriage prospects.