In beginning my testimony I must stress that the views I express
are entirely my own, and should not be construed as representing
any official position of The Heritage Foundation, with that
understanding, I am honored to be asked by the Committee on Ways
and Means, Subcommittee on Human Resources, to testify today on
Welfare and Marriage Issues.
The family is the fundamental building block of society and
predates the state and even the societies it builds. This is very
easily seen in the history of the United States where the societies
before the Union was formed had their own very recent histories.
All the states were clearly preceded by families uniting to form
communities and these communities in turn becoming commonwealths
and states. Even as the Union expanded this pattern was repeated
again and again.
At the heart of the family is the mother and father who bring
their children into existence. Each child comes, not seeking to be
brought into the world, but coming as a response to the sexual
union of its father and mother. To grow to adulthood each child
thrives best when raised in a married family where his or her
father and mother are permanently devoted to each other and to
their children. The social science data has always supported this
common-sense and ancient insight but recently the avalanche of
research makes this conclusion incontrovertible. And almost to a
piece these studies are produced by politically liberal academics,
not by conservatives. The implication of this research is that
every child has the right to the married love of the father and
mother that brought it, unasked, into existence.
Today however only 28 out of every hundred children conceived in
the United States will reach age 18 having the marriage of the
biological father and mother intact. Only 40 out of every 100
American children born reach age 18 with the marriage of their
biological father and mother intact. The level of alienation and
rejection between fathers and mothers has reached such astronomical
proportions that one can only conclude that America is a very
dangerous place for a child to come into existence. Despite all our
rhetoric of concern for children we have so far refused to give
them that which they most desire and want: the love of their
parents for each other. It is time to begin to redress this
disastrous cultural drift. Not only the welfare of the nation needs
it, the welfare of children cries out for it.
To help Congress in its deliberations for the last round of
Welfare Reform The Heritage Foundation reviewed the literature on
the effects of out of wedlock births. 1 The conclusions still stand and have
only been amplified by time, and the further review of others.
Out of Wedlock Births increase the national incidence of
- lowered health for newborns and increases their chances of
dying;
- retarded cognitive, especially verbal, development of young
children;
- lowered educational achievement;
- lowered job attainment as young adults;
- increased behavior problems;
- lowered impulse control (aggression and sexual behavior) ;
- increased anti-social development. Together all these effects
help change their communities from being a support to being a
danger to the development of families and their children, and
increases the crime rate in their community.
Last year I and my colleague Robert Rector reviewed the
literature on the effects of divorce on children2, and from the social science
literature we can clearly state that divorce increases the national
incidence of
- Crime
- Abuse
- Addiction
- Decrease the Capacity to Learn
- Decrease the Graduation Rates
- Lower Income and Higher Incidences of Poverty
- Adult and juvenile suicide
- Harmful Mental and Physical Health Effects
Furthermore within family life divorce has the effect of
increasing the incidence of
- Weaker parent-child relationships;
- Destructive ways of handling conflict within the family;
- Diminished social competency with peers;
- A diminished sense of masculinity or femininity in
adolescence;
- Troubled courtships;
- Increased premarital teenage sexual activity, number of sexual
partners during adolescence, and out-of-wedlock childbirths;
- Higher numbers of children leaving home earlier, as well as
higher levels of cohabitation for these children; and - keeping the
cycle expanding -
- Higher rates of divorce for the children of divorced
parents.
What States have not done
As others have testified and The Heritage Foundation has
reviewed 3 the
states response to the breakdown of marriage has been minimal.
Outside those who have testified before this panel virtually
nothing else has been attempted by state legislatures or
governors.
If we include all the monies spent or budgeted by the states
that have moved on this issue they amount to less than one cent
spent to shore up marriage for every thousand dollars spent to
support single parenthood though welfare.4
This pattern of spending is a guaranteed way to expand the need
for a bigger and bigger safety net as marriage continues to break
down more and more. And is hardly the response Congress desired
when in the TANF reform it urged states to strengthen marriage and
family life:
How the Welfare Reform Act of 1996
Encourages Marriage
Public Law 104-193, which block grants Temporary Assistance to
Needy Families funds to the states, encouraged the states to
strengthen marriage and reduce out-of-wedlock births by stipulating
that:
The purpose [of this legislation]…is to increase the
flexibility of States in operating a program designed to:
- provide assistance to needy families so that children may be
cared for in their own homes or in the homes of relatives;
- end the dependence of needy parents on government benefits by
promoting job preparation, work, and marriage;
- prevent and reduce the incidence of out-of-wedlock
pregnancies and establish annual numerical goals for preventing
and reducing the incidence of these pregnancies; and
- encourage the formation and maintenance of two-parent
families.5
What Federal Government can do to
guide the states
This level of family breakdown is totally new in human history
and learning how to restore marriage is going to be one of
societies biggest tasks this coming decade, this coming
century.
One overriding common sense rule is that all forms of penalty
against marriage, penalties put in place by the federal government
over decades, need to be substituted over time with marriage
bonuses, particularly for the poor. Marriage by the poor has been
penalized by this body, unjustly and to great national detriment,
and the injustice needs to be reversed.
More concrete regulation of the states is in order on this
issue. Just as clear and unambiguous federal rules created the
welfare reform miracle that we have seen in this cycle, so too,
unambiguous and clear guidelines are needed to strengthen marriage
and help discourage or minimize the desire for divorce.
A set proportion of TANF monies or a separate TANF budget for
the rebuilding of marriage among the poor or near poor needs to be
appropriated by Congress and then its spending needs to be guided
in much the same fashion as happened with TANF.
However lessons from Congress's efforts to reward states that
reduced out of wedlock birth need to be incorporated. By rewarding
those states that had the greatest drop in out of wedlock births
without requiring a plan of action to bring about the reduction
Congress has rewarded some states that have done nothing to deserve
the rewards. They just happened to be the lucky recipients of
demographic changes that had nothing to do with policy initiatives.
In experimental psychology the behavior induced by rewarding in
this fashion is called `superstition', much as a gambler who wins
big on number `26' at the roulette table continues thereafter to
play `26' on his big bets.
New Offices of Marriage
Initiatives.
The federal government should move to create in each federal
social policy department (Health and Human Services, Education,
Housing and Urban Development, and Justice) an Office of Marriage
Initiatives. It would make sense for these offices to coordinate
with each other, because the main work of many of their
sub-agencies is increased by the breakdown of marriage: ill health,
poverty, crime, and addictions. The good news is that with success
in figuring out how to promote marriage and stabilize families the
demand for services and the cost to the taxpayer will drop over
time. This is one of the few instances where the success of a
government social agency would cause a decrease in the need for
government.
For instance for the HHS Office of Marriage Initiatives I
propose the following:
Program Description:
A new office within the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services would coordinate the Administration's efforts to make all
federal social programs more marriage-friendly; bring attention to
the positive effects that increasing stable marriages will have on
decreasing demand for federal entitlements (which merely deal with
the effects of the breakdown of the family); and initiate ways to
foster marriage and decrease divorce, particularly among welfare
recipients. It would be funded by transferring monies from the
following entitlement programs: Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families (TANF), the Child Support Enforcement Program, and Family
Planning Programs.
Recommended Action:
Create a new Office of Marriage Initiatives within the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services' Administration for
Children and Families (ACF) to target TANF, Child Support
Enforcement, Family Planning, and other program dollars to
pro-marriage initiatives with the specific objective of reducing
the rate of divorce and out-of-wedlock births each by 30 percent,
especially among welfare recipients, within the next decade. Merge
the Office of Adolescent Pregnancy and Title V Office (abstinence
programs) with this new Office so that their programs contribute to
the effort to rebuild the culture of marriage. Allocate about 10
percent of the ACF budget for personnel and discretionary programs
to the new Office.
Rationale:
The cost to society from the breakdown of marriage is
substantial. According to one federal estimate, the cost of
"faltering child development" approaches $1 trillion a year.6 Much of this can be
attributed to the breakdown of marriage, since out-of-wedlock
births and divorce have been shown to feed the demand for welfare
services and to contribute to a multiplicity of social problems,
including poverty, crime, addiction, poor health, lower education
achievement, job instability, depression, and suicide.
The thinking and culture behind today's federal social programs
must be made more marriage-friendly. A sound social policy that
targets a portion of the federal budget to programs that reduce
illegitimacy and divorce would decrease the future demand for
federal assistance and entitlements. Setting aside at least 10
percent of the ACF budget to help increase stable marriages and
reduce the demand for federal assistance is reasonable. This would
leave 90 percent of the ACF's funding for programs that deal with
the effects of family breakdown.
Specifically, the new Office of Marriage Initiatives would:
- Identify successful pro-marriage programs in operation
and disseminate its findings;
- Design demonstration projects based on those
findings;
- Advise states on how to use surplus TANF monies to
increase marriage and decrease out-of-wedlock births and
divorce;
- Stimulate results-oriented curricula on marriage and
sexual abstinence in high school, with follow-up evaluations of
their effectiveness;
- Rebuild a federal-state system for gathering hard data
and statistics on marriage and divorce; and
- Design research so that data are used to analyze how
much the increase in out-of-wedlock births and divorce over the
past 30 years has cost the government, including the decrease in
revenue resulting from the effects of family breakdown.
Child Support Enforcement Programs
One federal program exists solely because of the breakdown in
marriage, the child support enforcement program.
Program Description:
The federal government has taken an increasingly large role in
the Child Support Enforcement system to locate absent parents,
establish paternity, obtain court orders for child support or
modifications of existing court orders, promote medical insurance
for children under the absent parent's plan, collect child support
from non-compliant parents, and enforce interstate payments of
child support.
Total federal administrative expenditures for Child Support
Enforcement have increased steadily from $236 million in 1978 to
$2.04 million in 1994.7 The total net federal cost of these
programs by FY 2001 is almost $2.22 billion.8 Payments to the states for Child
Support Enforcement are authorized under Titles I, IV-D, X, XI, and
XVI of the Social Security Act.9
Recommended Actions:
Transfer 10 percent of the Child Support Enforcement budget
($140 million in FY 2000) to the new Office of Marriage Initiatives
to fund efforts-including initiatives to reduce divorce and
increase stable marriages-that will reduce the future need for
child support enforcement.
Dedicate a portion of the remaining Child Support Enforcement
funds to training mediators in how to obtain more robust joint
agreements to ensure that both parents continue supporting their
children and to reduce the need to take delinquent parents to
court, with special attention to the track record of the Focused
Thinking Mediation program now in use in Southern Michigan's family
courts.
Many other aspects of HHS functioning have parts that really
ought to be carried out in a marriage friendly office. The
gathering and rebuilding of the national statistics on marriage and
divorce is one such project that has always been the neglected
program of the two agencies that have housed it: The Bureau of the
Census and then the National Center for Health Statistics within
the Center for Disease Control.
Child and adult domestic abuse, foster care, and adoption all
have many correlates to marriage as the best situation in which to
achieve the desired ends. Yet marriage receives little to no
attention in the agencies that direct these programs.
The Department of Justice captures nothing, anywhere, in its
statistics gathering, on the relationship between family structure
and crime, not for juveniles or adults, despite the clear link of
rates of abuse and of crime, particularly juvenile crime, to
different family structures. The married family, we know from
research other than that from DOJ is the safest and best at raising
children to avoid crime. Similar patterns of data gathering hold
for the Department of Education10, for HUD and likely for Interior
as well.
As backing for these conclusions and recommendations I offer as
Appendix background a recent short study of the reviewing the
activities of states, localities, and private secular and religious
efforts to encourage marriage and discourage divorce:
See: "Encouraging Marriage and Discouraging Divorce."
http://www.heritage.org/library/backgrounder/bg1421.html
The following charts describe the national family picture,
particularly for children.














Patrick
F. Fagan is William H.G. FitzGerald Fellow in Family and
Culture Issues at The Heritage Foundation.
Endnotes
1 For that review of the
literature see: Patrick F. Fagan, "Rising Illegitimacy: American
Social Catastrophe" June 29, 1994, The Heritage Foundation,
FYI #19, 1994
2 Patrick F. Fagan and Robert
R. Rector, "The Effects of
Divorce on America" The Heritage Foundation,
Backgrounder # 1373, June 5, 2000
3 Patrick F. Fagan, "Encouraging
Marriage and Discouraging Divorce" The Heritage Foundation,
Backgrounder # 1421, March 26, 2001.
4 Total spent out on all TANF:
average of $400 billion per year for the last four years. The total
amount spent to increase marriage or reduce divorce in all 50
states over this period amounts to about $ 13 million.
5 Public Law 104-193, Section
401, Block Grants to States for Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families (emphasis added).
6 Lackqueline L. Teague, Judy
Thorne, Heather B. Luckey, and Thomas J. Hoeger, "Social Costs of
Faltering Child Development, Final Report," prepared by the
Research Triangle Institute for the Centers for Disease Control,
April 1999.
7 1998 Green Book:
Background Material and Data on Programs Within the Jurisdiction of
the Committee on Ways and Means, WMCP-105-7,[Report No.
WMCP-105-7? Committee Print No. WMCP-105-7?] U.S. House of
Representatives, 105th Cong., 2nd Sess., May 19, 1998, p.
549.
8 Office of Management and
Budget, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year
2001: Appendix, p. 463.
9 See P.L. 104-35 for the
latest authorizations.
10 Though this department
has recently released a study that confirms, in education outcomes,
the superior contribution of married family life for children. See:
Christine Winquist Nord and Jerry West, `Fathers and Mothers
Involvement in their Children's Schools by Family Type and Resident
Status' National Center for Education Statistics, Department of
Education, May 2001.