April 24th, 2008

Now We Know, Marriage is Cost-Effective

 by Carey Roberts  
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A new report from the Institute for American Values documents the costs of divorce and unwed childbearing.

It’s long been known that family break-up inflicts massive social costs on communities and children. But what about the burden it imposes on the American taxpayer?

It’s a proven fact that family dissolution places children at greater risk of poverty, mental and physical illness, juvenile delinquency, abuse, substance abuse, and educational failure. A few years ago Wade Horn, former director of the federal Administration for Children and Families, revealed, “My agency spends $46 billion per year operating 65 different social programs. If one goes down the list of these programs . . . the need for each is either created or exacerbated by the breakup of families and marriages.”

But what about the impact of heavier demands on the criminal justice system? Medical care services? And losses in tax revenues? At last we have a good idea of the answer.

Last week — Tax Day to be exact — the Institute for American Values released its ground-breaking report, “Taxpayer Costs of Divorce and Unwed Childbearing.” Researched by economist Benjamin Scafidi, the document lays out an elegant four-step logic:

1. Among anti-poverty programs like TANF, housing assistance, food stamps, Medicaid, WIC, etc. – family break-up is responsible for 32% of these programs’ costs.

2. Government programs for children such as Head Start, SCHIP, school breakfast programs, etc. – family dissolution causes 36% of these costs.

3. Justice system — 24% of crime is the result of childhood poverty.

4. Lost taxes – Newly employed workers would presumably pay taxes to the IRS (10% of wages), state and local government (11%), and FICA (15%).

Tally up the numbers and – voila! – the total taxpayer cost of fragile families comes out to $112 billion dollars a year. That’s billion with a B.

But what’s clear is these numbers vastly underestimate the financial impact of family break-down, in at least three ways.

When men marry, their wages go up 8-15%, thus increasing tax revenues.

Second, children who grow up in a single-parent household are at greater risk of health problems and sexual promiscuity. Even if they don’t fall into the clutches of poverty, they will likely call upon federally-subsidized programs to render medical help and care for their children.

And single elderly women are four times more likely to be warehoused in a nursing home, compared to their married counterparts. That places an enormous burden on Medicaid.

In one respect, though, the Institute for American Values report is flawed. To encourage persons to marry, IAV proposes “marriage-strengthening programs.” But touting the marriage education Band-aid is like saying we can fix a broken welfare system by teaching teenage moms to refrain from sex.

The reason for plummeting marriage rates, of course, is not a dearth of marriage education. The problem is the tangle of laws and programs that weaken the role of marriage, marginalize fathers, and dangle incentives in front of women to leave their families.

Like the school curricula that teach gay marriage is morally equivalent to heterosexual union.

Like the no-fuss, no-fault divorce laws that allow partners to casually discard their sacred vows.

Like the gender studies programs that brainwash co-eds into believing marriage exploits women. (According to rad-fem Catherine MacKinnon: “Feminism stresses the indistinguishability of prostitution, marriage, and sexual harassment.”)

It’s the domestic violence programs, underwritten to the tune of $1 billion in federal money each year, that escalate partner conflict and prohibit couples counseling, all the while fostering contempt for men.

It’s ham-fisted child support programs that take away persons’ drivers’ licenses and toss low-income dads in jail.

It’s the deplorable Supreme Court Planned Parenthood v. Casey ruling that precludes a father from being informed about his partner’s plan to abort.

And it’s female empowerment programs like the federally-endorsed “Girl Power!” that undercut the role of families.

For years social and fiscal conservatives have co-existed in a sometimes uneasy alliance – call it a marriage of convenience if you will. “We’ll tolerate your musings on abortion and gay marriage, just so long as you don’t fool with our tax cuts and de-regulation plans,” the green-visored conservatives would say.

But now, both wings of conservatism have found common ground – restore the traditional family, rally around the needs of children, staunch the growth of social welfare programs, and save billions in taxpayer money.

Call it a match made in heaven.

Family Issues, Homosexuality



Carey Roberts is a regular contributor to NewsWithViews.com, and has been published in The Washington Times and LewRockwell.com, among others.
careyroberts@comcast.net

Read more articles by Carey Roberts

  1. You've made a convincing case here for government funding of family planning (read: birth control)!

    And what, exactly, does gay marriage have to do with the taxpayer expense of assisting children of single parents? If anything, it might be beneficial, with financially stable, childless gay couples eager to adopt kids who would otherwise be raised by poor, single mothers, relieving taxpayers of the support burden.

    On domestic violence, are you really suggesting that wives and children of abusers are better off being beaten and intimidated than being able to escape this toxic situation?

    And regarding deadbeat dads, if they paid the child support they owed, it wouldn't be necessary to take "ham-fisted" legal measures to compel them to do so, would it?

    Comment by Dr Kilovolt | April 26, 2008

  2. I think his case is for making divorce harder to get–and
    taking marriage more seriously. "No fault divorce" created precisely that–an abusive marriage partner could "get out" of marriage w/o penalty. As for domestic violence, the cult of the victim has made frivolous allegations of abuse a simple way to punish, generally (but not always) speaking, the male partner. The issue here is not forcing a marriage partner to endure abuse–it's facing up the simple fact that the courts are generally incapable of determining accurately whether abuse has taken place. THe result is that thousands of fathers are prevented from being with their children and branded as criminals. As for your final point on child support, you aren't familiar with the system. In most states, father's child support is simply deducted from their salary–so they never see the money. (uh, any civil libertarians interested?). The moment something happens to the father's job, the father is "in contempt." This means any attorney can "score" a contempt on the father–and extort enormous "attorney's fees" by dragging the father into court. –if you think a father who has lost his job can temporarily get his support reduced, you simply have no idea what your'e talking about. Most "deadbeat dads" are father's who have lost thier jobs, can in no way afford legal representation, and who are eventually jailed so as to "help mothers." That this does nothing for mothers, fathers or children is not acknowledged by blood-thirsty pundits, who like the thought of "dead beats" in jail–even if this has nothing to do with helping any of the parties involved.

    Comment by Nathan Alexander | April 28, 2008

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