From USA Today
Study: Divorce, unwed parenting cost taxpayers billions
New York (AP) - Divorce and out-of-wedlock childbearing cost U.S. taxpayers more than $112 billion a year, according to a study commissioned by four groups advocating more government action to bolster marriages.
Sponsors say the study is the first of its kind and hope it will prompt
lawmakers to invest more money in programs aimed at strengthening
marriages. Two experts not connected to the study said such programs are of dubious merit and suggested that other investments - notably job creation - would be more effective in aiding all types of needy families.
There have been previous attempts to calculate the cost of divorce in
theirs is the first to gauge the broader cost of "family fragmentation" -
both divorce and unwed childbearing.
The study was conducted by
"The study documents for the first time that divorce and unwed childbearing - besides being bad for children - are costing taxpayers a ton of money," said David Blankenhorn, president of the Institute for American Values.
"We keep hearing this from state legislators, 'Explain to me why this is
any of my business? Aren't these private matters?'" Blankenhorn said. "Take a look at these numbers and tell us if you still have any doubt."
Scafidi's calculations were based on the assumption that households headed by a single female have relatively high poverty rates, leading to higher spending on welfare, health care, criminal justice and education for those raised in the disadvantaged homes. The $112 billion estimate includes the cost of federal, state and local government programs, and lost tax revenue at all levels of government.
Reducing these costs, Scafidi said, "is a legitimate concern of government,
policymakers and legislators."
While the study doesn't offer formal recommendations, it does suggest that
state and federal lawmakers consider investing more money in programs
intended to bolster marriages. Such a program has been in place in
"Because of the very large taxpayer costs associated with high rates of
divorce and unwed childbearing, and the modest price tags associated with most marriage-strengthening initiatives ... programs even with very modest success rates will be cost-effective," the study says.
But Tim Smeeding, an economics professor at the Maxwell School of Syracuse University, who was not involved in the study, said he's seen no convincing evidence that the marriage-strengthening programs work.
"I have nothing against marriage - relationship-building is great," he
said. "But alone it's not going to do the job. A full-employment economy
would probably be the best thing - decent, stable jobs."
He also noted the distinctive problems arising in black urban areas where
the rate of single-mother households is highest.
"A high number of African-American men have been in prison - that limits
their future earning potential and makes them bad marriage partners,
regardless of what kind of person they are," Smeeding said. "A marriage
program doesn't address that problem at all."
Another expert not connected to the study,
sociologist Pamela Smock, suggested that bigger investments in education
would pay long-term dividends - improving economic prospects even for children from fragmented, disadvantaged families.
"Providing a global number doesn't give us anything to go on," said Smock, who was skeptical of the study's $112 billion estimate.
"We're now nearing 40% of kids in
"I can't fathom that those marriage programs, even with increased
investment, are going to reduce that."
Blankenhorn said it was "fair criticism" to note that the study made
multiple references to marriage-strengthening programs while not proposing other strategies for reducing the cost of family fragmentation.
"Maybe we should have been more ecumenical," he said. "Let everybody have their say. Let's try things out. ... Nobody knows exactly the strategies
which are going to work."
---
Source: "Divorce, Unwed Parenting Cost Taxpayers Billions," Associated
Press, 15 April 2008.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Study: Divorce, unwed parenting cost taxpayers billions
Posted by GR Klein at 3:27 PM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment