Family Policies that Work: An International Perspective**
Click on a Title / TopicFamily Policies that Work: An International Perspective**
By by Kevin Andrews*
* Kevin Andrews is a member of The Australian Parliament and Chairman of its House of Representatives Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs. **From The World Congress of Families II
In order to comment on family policies that work, it is useful briefly to retrace the major demographic and social trends affecting families in the developed world. The trends fall into three broad categories.
1. A breakdown of marriage and family
There are a number of discernible trends relating to families in Western nations in recent decades:
The marriage rate has dropped;
The average age at marriage has risen;
The divorce rate has risen dramatically;
The remarriage rate has fallen;
The out-of-wedlock birth rate has risen;
The proportion of single-parent families has climbed markedly.
These changes are having a profound impact upon families.
First, rising rates of divorce and unwed childbearing mean the steady disintegration of the married, mother-father child-raising unit;
Second, families have increasingly lost the ability to carry out their primary social functions: maintaining the population levels, regulating sexual behavior, socializing children, and caring for family members;
Third, influence and authority has been transferred from families to other institutions such as schools, peer groups, the media, and the State;
Fourth, family units have grown smaller and less stable; and
Fifth, familism has declined as a cultural value in relationship to other values such as personal autonomy and egalitarianism.
Taken together, these data reveal a steady displacement of a marriage culture with a culture of divorce and single parenthood.
If these developments were associated with an improving lifestyle for our children, they might be applauded. Generally, our GDP, our health, and our educational levels have risen, but consider the evidence of what is happening:
Youth suicide has increased markedly;
Reports of child abuse rise each year;
Alcohol and drug abuse among teenagers has risen markedly;
Violence has risen;
Levels of welfare dependency are much higher than two or three decades ago; and
Single-parent families, even with government benefits, continue to be amongst the poorest groups in the community.
As Professor Linda Waite from the University of Chicago and others have shown, stable marriage is not only the healthiest environment for adults, it is the optimal place for raising children. The evidence of the adverse impact of divorce on children continues to mount. The failure of marriage and the breakdown of family structures is hurting many of our children deeply and dreadfully.
This observation should not be seen as an attempt to belittle the efforts of many single parents, often against difficult odds, who are successfully raising their children and who deserve our support; nor should it be interpreted as a refusal to recognize that some married couples are failing the task. Nor should it be taken as a call for a return to marriage forms of earlier years. To the contrary, marriage and family life require a balance of values. The enhancement of family life for the welfare of children involves the balancing of rights and obligations: between men and women; parents and children; individuals and the community; the present and future generations. In the past the balance was not always right. There was often an overemphasis on women’s obligations–to husbands, to children, and to the community–at the expense of individual development. But today, the goal of balance is often replaced by the contemporary libertarian rejection of all obligation in the name of individual freedom.
2. Aging societies
Aging populations have a major impact on nations. By the year 2020, many nations will face a major challenge in providing for an aged population. According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the ratio of older people to those in the workforce in 1990 was 19 percent. By the year 2030, this dependency ratio will double to 38 percent across the OECD. In Germany, it is expected to soar to 49.2 percent, in Italy 48.3 percent, France 39.1 percent, Austria 44 percent, Belgium 41.1 percent, USA 36.8 percent, and Australia 33 percent.
In countries like Australia and the United States, there has been a continuing shift over the past three decades of government resources from couples with children to older people. This shift in the allocation of resources continues apace. On current trends for both nations, some 40 percent of the population will require long-term care at some stage of their lives. In Germany, for example, the proportion of the population in the working-age group of 26-59 is only 36.5 percent, while the proportion aged 60 and over is 35.8 percent. Demographers predict that the aged will increase to 43.9 percent of the population by 2010, and 67.2 percent by 2050.
This aging of the population will have a considerable impact on our nations. Not only will health-care costs increase. The need for retirement income and other benefits will fall upon a decreasing proportion of the population.
3. A population implosion
For the past three decades a number of exponents of apocalyptic perspectives have suggested that the world faces a population explosion. Their thesis has been that the human race is breeding itself to a point of unsustainability. But as Nicholas Eberstat has observed:
The modern population explosion was sparked not because people suddenly started breeding like rabbits, but rather because they finally stopped dying like flies...it wasn’t that fertility rates soared; rather, mortality rates plummeted. Since the start of our century, the average life expectancy at birth for a human being has probably doubled; it may have more than doubled.
In fact, the Western world is probably facing a population implosion. The Economist magazine recently summarized the trends:
In 50 or 100 years’ time, however, most countries are more likely to worry about the lack of babies than the excess. For there is now a serious possibility…that world population growth will stabilize by around 2040 at about 7.5 billion and then start to decline….Repeatedly, the UN’s demographers have revised down their population projections….[T]he number of babies born into the world will fall below the number needed for replacement….[W]ith fertility rates in rapid decline, the debate about the global birth rate is now over when, not whether, it will fall below replacement level.
The U.N. Population Division recently estimated that 44 percent of the world’s people live in nations where the fertility rate has already fallen below the replacement rate. For the population to remain stable, women must have an average of 2.1 babies each. In 61 countries, there are insufficient births to replace the population. To take just a few examples: In the U.S., women are having just 2 children; in the U.K., just 1.7; in Japan, 1.4; in Italy, 1.2; in Spain, just 1.15.
In a recent study of global fertility rates, the Australian demographer Peter McDonald concluded that if the current levels of fertility were maintained in many Western nations, they would threaten the future existence of the nations concerned:
In an era in which we have come to understand the momentum of population increase, it is remarkable that we are yet to appreciate that the same momentum applies to population decrease.
With increasing numbers of parents having only one child, many people in the future will live in families where intergenerational ties are greatly loosened. For example, if an only child marries an only child, their child will have no aunts, uncles, or cousins. This is a realistic scenario for many families in the new millennium.
Although the effects of declining birth rates may not have an immediate impact on our societies, marriage breakdown, an aging population, and declining fertility combine to produce an environment inherently more unstable and antithetical to healthy family life.
While full employment is likely to return in nations currently suffering high levels of unemployment, many people who live longer will do so in circumstances of isolation and loneliness. Extended families will virtually disappear.
Demographic patterns are not easily reversed. Even if nations introduced policies today to address these trends, it would likely take two generations for an impact to be observed.
Moreover, popular ideas and current lifestyle choices mitigate against the acceptance of appropriate policy responses. Having experienced their parents’ divorces, the movement of governmental support from families with children to the elderly, high levels of unemployment, the need to have two incomes to achieve what their parent’s regarded as a reasonable standard of living, and facing what they perceive as an uncertain future, many young people are postponing or avoiding marriage and delaying children.
Family policies that work
In order, therefore, to decide what national family policies work, it is necessary to have clear objectives, of which, I believe, there are two:
First, there is a need to strengthen marriage and reduce the incidence of family breakdown; and
Secondly, there is a need to offset the combined impact of an aging population and declining birth rates.
Family policies will only work if they have a realistic chance of meeting these two objectives in the medium to long term.
The need for an integrated strategy has been recognized by others. The National Commission on America’s Urban Families identified three prevailing national responses to the trend of family fragmentation, namely: deny the problem; treat the symptoms; and change the economy. The Commission stated that "each of these approaches are championed by serious, sincere people. Each contains elements of truth and insight." But it found these responses, both individually and as a group, to be fundamentally inadequate because "they do not contain the realistic possibility of halting or reversing the personal and societal problems that stem from the trend of family fragmentation."
Let me outline a framework of what I believe is an appropriate policy response. In order to bring about a cultural change, there are at least four areas that should be addressed. Where appropriate, I will illustrate these elements by reference to policies adopted in various nations.
Explicit family policies
First, we must have the explicit recognition of family policy. Despite political rhetoric about families, few nations have a national family policy. Families are treated as welfare recipients, or as senior citizens, or as defense force personnel, or as public housing occupants, or as taxpayers–but not as families. Even where programs have an impact upon the family, its members are compartmentalized by age: infancy, childhood, youth, and the elderly.
The failure of family policies to emerge as a distinct issue reflects the failure to agree on a common definition of "family." But as the veteran U.S. Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan remarked:
A nation without a conscious family policy leaves to chance and mischance an area of social reality of the utmost importance, which in consequence will be exposed to the untrammelled and frequently thoroughly undesirable impact of policies arising in other areas.
The first step to treating families seriously is for governments to adopt specific family policies. Surveys repeatedly indicate that family life is a popular aspiration for people. In Australia, as many as 90 percent of young people say that they wish to marry, and up to 70 percent of people report that their greatest satisfaction comes from their family. A majority of the younger generation who have grown up with the reality of divorce in their lives aspire to marriage as a lifelong commitment.
Even if the fundamental philosophical position that democracy is based upon healthy families is not accepted, the human and economic consequences of family fragmentation require government to frame an effective strategy for securing social stability and cohesion. As my Parliamentary Committee found, the cost of marriage breakdown in Australia, with a population of 19 million people, is between $3 and $6 billion a year.
The Irish Commission on the Family stated:
The foundations of family policy, the principles and objectives which underlie and guide it need to be set out clearly. What the State is trying to achieve for and with families–the strategic dimension of family policy–should be clarified and made explicit.
The Commission found that there is a need to strengthen the institutional framework of family policy so that the various manifestations of family policy acquire a greater degree of coherence and rationality. It proposed a series of principles, the first of which is the "recognition that the family unit is a fundamental unit providing stability and well-being in our society."
The decision by the Australian government to create a new Department of Family and Community Services, replacing the Department of Social Security and bringing together a range of government programs dealing with families, is an illustration of a rational approach to families. The development of a National Families Strategy, in response to my committee’s 1998 report to Parliament, is a reflection of this first response. A further development could involve the introduction of a Family Policy Grid for all departments, as pioneered in the Canadian province of Alberta. There, all government departments and agencies are required to consider the impact of their policies and programs on families in the planning and implementation of all initiatives.
The explicit adoption of family policies encourages governments to confront two cultural forces which have undermined families and communities, namely, the lessening of family autonomy, especially through state programs; and the weakening of family through the growth of unrestrained individualism.
Recognition of family in economic policies
The second element in an effective national family policy is economic and involves a recognition of the advantages to individuals and society of lifelong marriages, of the desirability of higher fertility rates in the Western world, and of the real sacrifices entailed raising children.
It is also an important recognition that two economies exist within nations: the market economy, in which exchanges take place through money and in which competition and efficiency drive decisions; and the home economy, in which exchanges take place through the altruistic sharing of goods and services among family members. As Allan Carlson and David Blankenhorn have written:
It is precisely the home economy–acts of unpaid production ranging from parental childcare and nursing of the sick and the elderly to gardening, home carpentry, and food preparation–that is the organizing principle of family life and the basis of civil society. Every marriage creates a new home economy. These little economies are largely undetected in our measurement of the gross national product, just as they are usually beyond the reach of tax collectors. But they are vitally important. If they thrive, the well-being of children and society as a whole improves.
In many nations such as the United States and Australia, there has been a massive intergenerational subsidy to those people who raised their families in the 1950’s and 60’s. That is, government programs and benefits favored the earlier generation when they were raising their families and today favors them in their old age. In contrast, there is little net assistance to families with children today.
In the past three years, we have begun to reverse some of these trends in Australia by raising the tax-free threshold–that is, the level of income before tax is paid–for families with children, especially for families with one parent at home.
The Australian Government’s Family Tax Initiative increased the tax-free threshold by $1000 for each dependent child up to the age of 16 and each dependent secondary student up to 18 years. In addition, single-income families (including single parent families) receive a further $2,500 increase in their tax-free threshold if they have a child under five. For a single-income family with three children, one of whom is under five years, the tax-free threshold has almost been doubled.
The taxation-reform package passed by the Parliament this year builds on these initiatives. Besides reducing personal income taxes and increasing and simplifying family benefits, the Family Tax Initiative doubles the tax-free threshold. Beginning July 1, 2000, all single-income families, including single-parent families with one child under five years, will have an effective tax-free threshold of $13,000, more than double the new general threshold of $6,000. This is a modest recognition of the positive social contribution that parents make in choosing to stay at home with young children.
Similarly, the policy of the Norwegian Government to pay parents the same amount that childcare centers or kindergartens receive in state subsidies–approximately $6,000 per year per child–gives parents a choice about staying at home with children up to the age of three years.
Further initiatives are necessary to address the competing pressures between family and work in our modern societies. As Janne Haaland Matlary, the Norwegian Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, has written: "In order to strengthen families and have a sustainable population, there is a need for policies that give parents flexibility, time, and an ability to combine child-rearing and careers. At a time when women are as well, or better, educated than men, it is completely unrealistic to expect them to stay at home in longer periods of their lives."
Interestingly, fertility rates in Scandinavia have increased in recent years and are now the highest in Europe. According to Dr. Matlary, there are two important economic policies behind this trend. The first is the child cash support referred to earlier. The second is the generous paid maternity leave available in Scandinavia. In Norway, for example, a new mother is legally entitled to 42 weeks of leave at full pay or 52 weeks of leave at 80 percent of pay. Unpaid leave, with a legal guarantee of her job back when the leave is completed, is available for up to three years. Paid leave for new fathers, usually totalling about six weeks, is also strongly encouraged and, in some circumstances, mandatory. Dr Matlary notes:
The maternity leave has to be a paid one, it has to entail a job guarantee, and it has to be long enough so that the mother can avoid the stress of ‘double’ work as long as she breast-feeds, ideally up to nine months. It is beyond all doubt that breast-feeding is very important to the child, and also to the bonding between mother and child.
More than 90 percent of Scandinavian mothers breast-feed their infants for approximately nine months.
Two further factors are pertinent to the issue of work and family. First, although some studies suggest that higher rates of divorce are a result of increased labor force participation by women, there is considerable research evidence to suggest that women are more inclined to remain in the labor force because of high rates of divorce. That is, because many women are concerned, rightly, that their economic security is at stake should their marriage end in divorce, many more of them hold onto their jobs. If this is true, policies aimed at supporting marriage and increasing fertility need to take account of women’s concerns about economic security.
Secondly, there is powerful new evidence from neuroscience that the early years of development from conception to age six, particularly the first three years, set the base for competence and coping skills that will affect learning, behavior, and health throughout life. As Professor Fraser Mustard wrote in a major report for the Ontario government:
The evidence is clear that good early childhood development programs that involve parents or other primary caregivers of young children can influence how they relate to and care for children in the home, and can vastly improve outcomes for children’s behavior, learning, and health in later life.
The Early Years report identified parenting as a key factor in early child development for families at all socioeconomic levels. "Supportive initiatives for parents should begin as early as possible–from the time of conception–with programs of parent support and education." These findings reinforce the need for policies that encourage a better balance between work and parenting, particularly when children are in the early years of life.
Social policy
The third element in a national family policy is in the realm of social policy, particularly supporting marriage.
Beginning with California in 1969, most states and nations adopted unilateral, no-fault divorce laws. Although the importance of family was stressed in most debates about changes to divorce laws, the divorce of the parties remained the operational basis of such legislation everywhere. Under previous legal regimes, the concept of fault determined the outcome of the divorce application. In cultural terms, partners who walked away from a marriage, or caused their spouse to leave, risked the consequence of societal opprobrium. The introduction of unilateral, no-fault divorce changed this cultural norm, allowing partners to leave a marriage on the premise that a short period of separation constituted the irretrievable breakdown of the relationship. Hence society rightly concludes today that spouses can leave a marriage at will. As the former U.S. Domestic Policy Adviser Professor William Galston has noted, the "divorce epidemic did not just happen. The legal codes...aided and abetted it through the institution of no-fault divorce."
Galston suggested that two cultural changes were damaging families: the culture of rights without responsibilities and the ethos of instant gratification. These cultural shifts are reflected in attitudes fostered by no-fault divorce. Marriage is often perceived as a right, including the right to leave it, without corresponding duties. Conversely, obligations such as the sharing of property can be imposed by a court, contrary to any previous understanding of the parties.
Recent developments in some countries involve a rebalancing of rights and responsibilities. First, many jurisdictions have imposed child-support obligations on parents. Second, there has been the increasing legal recognition of nuptial agreements between parties. Third, alternative covenant marriages have been legislated in several states of the USA, beginning with Louisiana. Fourth, there is a growing marriage movement, especially in the U.S. Fifth, government attention in nations like Australia, the United Kingdom, and Ireland is being focussed once again on marriage. Taken together, these initiatives represent welcome developments in support of marriage and family.
A further aspect of social policy is the reform of welfare policies. In many nations, expenditure on welfare has grown enormously over the past three decades, often to very high levels. A consequence is that many families are dependent upon the State for their very economic survival. This in turn lessens family autonomy and contributes to a culture which is antithetical to the general well-being of children and society. A challenge for governments is to identify the barriers to family autonomy, especially through access to the labor force.
The fourth factor in a complete national family policy is cultural, in particular the portrayal of marriage and family life by Hollywood and in the media. Although I cannot develop this point here, few would doubt that the popular media often celebrate hedonistic individualism and a lifestyle that is antithetical to the commitment required for healthy, sustainable marriages in which children can be successfully raised.
Conclusion
While we read from time to time sensational reports that marriage and family life is fast disappearing, a lifelong commitment to family remains a popular aspiration, even amongst our young people.
Marriage and family life remain the optimal conditions for the socialization and education of children’s character and values, without which liberal democracy cannot properly flourish. For these reasons, we cannot ignore the trends affecting families today.
Just as economic reform has been the major policy challenge of the 1980’s and 90’s in many nations, how we address family issues will be a central concern of the next decade. The tragedy of marriage and family breakdown is not just the millions of dollars it costs each year: It is the personal and emotional trauma which research increasingly indicates affects many children, even into their adulthood, and the consequent diminution of health, educational opportunities, and well-being, including the stability of relationships of children whose parents divorced.
Policymakers and public officials in many parts of the world are beginning to recognize again the social, cultural, and economic importance of lifelong marriages and healthy families. I hope I have been able to outline an integrated national framework of effective family policies. More, however, needs to be done to spread these policy ideas throughout the world.
Our choice is clear. We can throw up our hands in despair, unwilling or unable to propose a solution to family breakdown and falling fertility rates, with all the social consequences that follow; or we can take a positive step forward, committed to the aspiration so many people share, in the hope that with practical support and encouragement, we can continue to build strong nations based on a healthy society with its foundation of stable family life.
Labels: The Breakdown of Marriage
1 comment(s):
Robert, you have given me sources that I can certainly use, and also this outstanding analysis of the situation. Thank you! I am working on this problem at my own blog, and presently am rendering more accessible Pius XI's Casti Cannubis, an encyclical on marriage and excellent statement of the definition and ends of the institution (here's a link to it, and I urge you to read it to see the perspective that 'humans being born to be eventual citizens of heaven' puts on marriage and womanhood).
http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/pius_xi/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xi_enc_31121930_casti-connubii_en.html
But this post of yours collects everything! There are many articles that touch on one or the other aspect, but you've got both problem and solution, in succinct language, without polemics. Well done. This article alone could get you into heaven.
Okay, you've noticed the word heaven twice now. I myself am not able to avoid polemics. I am convinced that the Christian, and more specifically Catholic, platform for family (I have borrowed that term from the computer field but it expresses it well) is the only one that works. It is powerful enough, on so many levels. And sir, the problem we have before us is gigantic. We really are facing extinction. They thought it would be hard to teach women to contracept; they are finding it absolutely impossible to unteach them.
I urge you to join the fight to save Catholicism, if you would save the family.
Between the two camps, those who deny the problem, and those who hope for the extinction of humanity (you must know they are legion! this point of view is being explicitly taught at universities), we are daily inundated with films and books that attack the family from one side or another: that mock fidelity, crucify motherly characters, lionize sterile homosexuality. Do you not sometimes feel faint? If not, you have more faith in God than I. I leave films crying that others are promoting for the oscar. Little Miss Sunshine, for example. People seem unable to understand the point anything is making.They don't seeme to be aware that media is making a secret point, and like a fish and a hook, they are swallowing it whole.
Thank you so much for this important work on your blog. I will promote it as much as I can. You might enjoy 'Catholics Save Wall Street on my own.' You might be the only person on earth who could understand the urgency with which I wrote it. My blog is http://thewhitelilyblog.wordpress.com
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