Interesting perspective on choices and challenges in our economy
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Bookshelf: 
LEISURE & ARTS 
Bookshelf: That Ring Makes a Difference 
13 December 2006 
The Wall Street Journal <javascript:void(0)>  
D16 
MARRIAGE AND CASTE IN AMERICA 
By Kay S. Hymowitz 
(Ivan R. Dee, 192 pages, $22.50) 
After Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans and introduced the public to
the horrific sight of those desperate people in the Superdome, Newsweek
headlined its coverage of the event "The Other America." The phrase was
an allusion to the 1962 book by Michael Harrington that helped inspire
the War on Poverty and perhaps also to John Edwards's "Two Americas," a
book about American haves and have-nots that received far too much
fawning attention during Mr. Edwards's vice-presidential run. Kay
Hymowitz, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute, freely admits that there
are two Americas. But that is where the resemblance to Mr. Edwards's and
Mr. Harrington's analysis ends. 
For Ms. Hymowitz, the two Americas do not divide between the poor who
are supposedly in need of government assistance and the rest of us. The
division is best defined in another way: between those who see marriage
as an indispensable condition of child-rearing and those who don't. If
we are becoming two Americas, it is one America in which parents are
married and another in which they are not. The Marriage Gap, as Ms.
Hymowitz calls it, appears likely to have a more profound effect on the
future of both Americas than the gender gap so lamented by the
feminists. 
Despite the "unmarriage revolution" ushered in by the noxious 1960s, the
anti-civilization decade, marriage is again flourishing among
well-educated women. Today's educated mothers may work outside the home
or not, but they and their husbands are committed to what Ms. Hymowitz
calls The Mission -- the project of shaping their children into adults
(and citizens) who have the requisite skills and self-discipline to
prosper in a complex, postindustrialist society. 
The Mission, notes Ms. Hymowitz, requires not a village but two married
parents. And, no, cohabitation doesn't do the trick. Even cohabiters who
have the education levels of their married counterparts are less
effective as parents. "As the core cultural institution," Ms. Hymowitz
writes, "marriage orders life in ways that we only dimly understand. It
carries with it signals about how we should live, signals that are in
line with both our economy and our politics in the largest sense." 
While there is more marriage among the better educated, with 92% of
children living with two parents coming from families that have an
income of $75,000 or better, there is less marriage among inner-city
parents. "Only about 20 percent of kids in families earning under
$15,000 live with both parents," writes Ms. Hymowitz. Which raises a
question: "Why would women working for a pittance at supermarket cash
registers decide to have children without getting married while women
writing briefs at Debevoise & Plimpton, who could easily afford to go it
alone, insist on finding husbands before they start families?" 
The answer, in Ms. Hymowitz's view, is that many among the urban poor
have lost the "life script" for future-oriented child-rearing. Policy
makers may assume that the problem is a shortage of employed,
marriageable men. But the problem is more existential, a loss of a sense
that marriage and children are connected. 
The most fascinating (but grimmest) sections of "Marriage and Caste in
America" deal with child-rearing skills in the unmarried America.
Children of single mothers on welfare, for instance, hear their mother
use fewer words. (According to one study cited in the book, the average
words heard per hour are 2,150 for a professor's children, 1,250 for
working-class children and 620 for children in welfare families.) What
is more, the talk of the welfare parents in the study "was meaner and
more distracted." It is not that these parents don't love their
children; it is that they do not have a "script" for being parents. Thus
they find it particularly difficult to rear children capable of thriving
in a knowledge-based society. 
According to Ms. Hymowitz -- and this is the scariest part of the book
-- most social analysts ignore the root of the problem and therefore end
up prescribing "solutions" that actually "smooth the way" for single
parenthood. "To listen to some policymakers," she writes, "one might
think that wanting to become a lawyer or anchorwoman -- and possessing
the requisite orderliness, discipline, foresight, and bourgeois
willingness to delay gratification -- are natural instincts rather than
traits developed over time through adults' prodding and example." 
Optimism is always more appealing than pessimism, and Ms. Hymowitz tries
to be hopeful, proclaiming a renewed stature for marriage -- in the
culture at large -- as the key institution in child-rearing. She may be
right about middle-class parents, but it is not clear whether the
message has yet reached unmarried America. If policy makers heed the
arguments and analysis in "Marriage and Caste in America," then Ms.
Hymowitz's optimism will at least be partly justified. 
For myself, I feel certain that the next time one of my friends can't
meet me for lunch because she is ferrying her offspring to yet another
life-enhancing lesson, I won't be annoyed. I'll know that she is nobly
engaged in The Mission, important not just to the edification and
college-admission forms of her offspring but also to the health of the
republic. It is a Mission, too, that she can best perform with a man who
is her husband. 
--- 
Ms. Hays is senior editor at the Independent Women's Forum. 

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