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Chapter 10. The Family and Household Transition. Chapter Outline. Defining Family Demography And Life Chances The Family And Household Transition Proximate Determinants Of Family And Household Changes. Chapter Outline. Changing Life Chances
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Chapter 10 The Family and Household Transition
Chapter Outline • Defining Family Demography And Life Chances • The Family And Household Transition • Proximate Determinants Of Family And Household Changes
Chapter Outline • Changing Life Chances • The Intersection Of Changing Life Chances And The Family And Household Transition
Families • In virtually every human society, people have organized their lives around a family unit. • A family is any group of people who are related to one another by marriage, birth, or adoption. • Family members share a sense of social bonding: the mutual acceptance of reciprocal rights and obligations, and of responsibility for each other’s well-being.
Households • People who share a housing unit are said to have formed a household. • A family household is a housing or residential unit occupied by people who are related to one another. • A nonfamily household is a housing unit that includes a person who lives alone, or consists of people living with nonfamily coresidents.
Family Demography • Concerned largely with the study and analysis of family households: • Their formation • Their change over time • Their dissolution
Household Composition and Family Structure • Total number of households in the United States increased from 63 million in 1970 to 106 million in 2000. • Within that increase was a change in the composition of the American household. • Married couples with children have become less common.
Demographic Transition Promotes Diverse Families • Because people are living longer they are likely to be widowed, are more likely to divorce, and less likely to marry early and begin childbearing. • Pressure to have children is relieved by the decline in fertility. • An increasingly urban population is presented with many options besides marriage and family-building.
Differences in Households with Children that are Mother-Only Families
Delayed Marriage • Early marriage is one of the most important mechanisms preventing women from achieving equality. • When a girl marries at a young age, she is drawn into a life of childbearing and family-building that makes it difficult for her to contemplate other options in life. • This is one reason why high fertility is closely associated with low status for women.
As % of Women Married 15-19 Declines, Difference in Age of Brides and Grooms Declines
Cohabitation in the U.S. • In 1970: • Average age at marriage for women was 20.3. • Number of cohabiting couples was 500,000. • Ratio of cohabiting to married couples was 1 to 100.
Cohabitation in the U.S. • In 2000: • Average age at marriage for women was 25.1. • Number of cohabiting couples was 3.8 million. • Ratio of cohabiting to married couples had jumped to 6 per 100.
Divorce • In the U.S. in 1857, there was a 27% chance that a husband aged 25 and a wife aged 22 would both be alive when the wife reached 65. • For couples marrying in the early 21st century, the chances have risen to 60%. • 5% of marriages contracted in 1867 ended in divorce. • Estimate is that half the marriages contracted 1970 will end in divorce.
Education • In 1940: • Less than one in four Americans 25 or older graduated from high school. • Women were more likely than men to graduate. • Approximately 5% of men and less than 4% of women were college graduates.
Education • In 2000: • 84% of both men and women were high school graduates. • About one in four Americans had graduated from college—with men still being more likely than women to be in that category.
Women in the Labor Force • Since 1940, the rates of labor force participation have risen for women, while declining for men. • Women represent 50% of all workers, but they are still concentrated in administrative support, sales, and service occupations.
Poverty Threshold • In 2002, the poverty threshold for a single person under 65 was $9,359. • Between 1960 and 1973, the % of Americans living below the poverty level was cut from 22% to 11%. • The poverty level has never again been as low as 11% nor higher than 15%; it was 12% in 2002.
Benefits of Marriage • Married couples have higher household income, • Married couples save more of their income. • Married couples have more wealth. • Married men and women live longer, and engage in fewer high-risk behaviors.
Benefits of Marriage • Children are better off financially than those in a one-parent family. • Children are less likely to drop out of school, less likely to have a teenage pregnancy, and less likely to be “idle” as a young adult than children in a one-parent family. • Married couples have sex more often and derive greater satisfaction from it than the unmarried do.