The story of women and marriage is tightly coupled to the story of men in society. The increase in college-educated women with robust careers has been coupled with the tendency for a large segment of the male population to be moving in the other direction, both academically and economically. It is clearly true that men have been hit harder by the changing economy over the past few decades, and that they have been slow in responding to these changes.
"As of last year, women held 51.4 percent of all managerial and professional positions, up from 26 percent in 1980. Today women outnumber men not only in college but in graduate school; they earned 60 percent of all bachelor’s and master’s degrees awarded in 2010, and men are now more likely than women to hold only a high-school diploma."
Women have traditionally married upwards, looking for a mate who could provide economic security. What happens if this stock of economically-secure males is diminished?
On an individual level this situation is not necessarily dire, unless one clings to old notions about women’s role and place in society.
Much of Bolick’s article discusses these "new ideas about romance and family." What is of interest to us today is the implication for society as these trends continue.
Bolick suggests that to discover where we are headed we merely need to look to the demographics of the African American population.
Bolick quotes a black law professor at Stanford, Ralph Richard Banks, who has written a book titled: Is Marriage for White People? He argues that the trends in the black community are a preview of what will occur in the white community.
There is a discussion of Banks and his book in The Economist that provides this chart.
The similarity in trend is obvious, with the major difference being the starting point. What does this portend?
"Many black women respond by ‘marrying down, but not out,’ as Mr Banks puts it. But that makes bad marriages. Two out of every three black marriages fail, about twice the rate of white marriages."
The desirable black men seem to love this situation; having the pick of women does not encourage commitment to any one on them. Black women have the choice of marrying down or putting up with "players." If they do choose to marry it usually ends poorly.
Bolick states that these trends are becoming apparent in the white community where indicators of family and social stability are falling.
Why should we as a society be concerned about all this? Individual men and women will suffer their fates or find their ways through these issues. It is the residue of failed marriages and failed parents that we as a society will be responsible for. Failed marriages tend to produce troubled children. Men who fall out of the economy will continue to breed and become role models for their offspring.
The fear is that this situation could lead to a downward spiral with a permanent and growing underclass that is unable, or incapable, of competing economically.
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