Changing Family Structures Play a Major Role in the Fight Against Poverty

Improving the family environment in which children are raised is vital to any serious effort to reduce poverty and expand opportunity.  Twenty-five years of extensive and rigorous research has shown that children raised in stable, secure families have a better chance to flourish.

The family structure in and of itself is an important factor in reducing poverty: children raised in single-parent families are nearly five times as likely to be poor as those in married-couple families.

In Chapter 3 of a new report from the AEI-Brookings Working Group on Poverty and Opportunity, the Working Group recommends policies that:

  1. Promote marriage as the most reliable route to family stability and resources;
  2. Promote delayed, responsible childbearing;
  3. Promote parenting skills and practices, especially among low-income parents; and
  4. Promote skill development, family involvement, and employment among young men as well as women.

Reference Information

Author: 

Lawrence Aber,
Stuart Butler,
Sheldon Danziger,
Robert Doar,
David T. Ellwood,
Judith M. Gueron,
Jonathan Haidt,
Ron Haskins,
Harry J. Holzer,
Kay Hymowitz,
Lawrence Mead,
Ronald Mincy,
Richard V. Reeves,
Michael R. Strain,
Jane Waldfogel
Publisher: 
AEI-Brookings Working Group on Poverty and Opportunity
Publication Date: 
December 2015