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Melissa Kearney on the Two-Parent Privilege

Melissa Kearney on the Two-Parent Privilege

FromThe Report Card with Nat Malkus


Melissa Kearney on the Two-Parent Privilege

FromThe Report Card with Nat Malkus

ratings:
Length:
64 minutes
Released:
Nov 1, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

On this episode of The Report Card, Nat Malkus speaks with Melissa Kearney about her new book, The Two-Parent Privilege: How Americans Stopped Getting Married and Started Falling Behind. Nat and Melissa discuss the decline in marriage among non-college-educated parents, why having two parents in the home matters for student outcomes, the stock of marriageable men, whether studying family structure is taboo, what the fracking boom can teach us about the decline in marriage, how marriage became decoupled from raising children, universal basic income for parents, why Asian Americans seem immune from the broader decline in marriage, intergenerational households, the difficulty of parenting, the importance of culture, and more.Melissa Kearney is the Neil Moskowitz Professor of Economics at the University of Maryland and the Director of the Aspen Economic Strategy Group. Show Notes:The Two-Parent Privilege: How Americans Stopped Getting Married and Started Falling BehindA Driver of Inequality That Not Enough People Are Talking AboutThe Puzzle of Falling US Birth Rates since the Great RecessionMale Earnings, Marriageable Men, and Non-Marital Fertility: Evidence from the Fracking BoomThe Economics of Non-Marital Childbearing and The “Marriage Premium for Children”Investigating Recent Trends in the U.S. Teen Birth RateMedia Influences on Social Outcomes: The Impact of MTV's 16 and Pregnant on Teen Childbearing
Released:
Nov 1, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The Report Card with Nat Malkus is the education podcast of the American Enterprise Institute. It is a hub for discussing innovative work to improve education – from early childhood to higher education – and the lives of America’s children. It evaluates research, policy, and practice efforts to improve the lives of families, schools and students. The Report Card seeks to engage with everyone who is interested in education in an accessible way. It brings guests that are doing compelling work across a spectrum from high level policy changes to innovations at the classroom level, work that will start conversations about improving education and the lives of children more broadly. Each episode lets listeners – policymakers, teachers, and parents –learn relevant information that they can use in their efforts to improve education.