Report

The Millennial Success Sequence: Marriage, Kids, and the “Success Sequence” among Young Adults

Young adults are more likely to avoid poverty if they follow a “success sequence” in this order: earning at least a high school diploma, working full-time, and getting married before having children. This report from the American Enterprise Institute and the Institute for Family Studies examines whether millennials are following this success sequence. The researchers found that 95% of millennials who married first before having children were not poor, but 72% of millennials who had children before marrying were poor. Millennials were also more likely to make it into the middle or higher end of the income distribution by age 28-34 if they married before having children.
Source
Partner Resources
Topics/Subtopics
Family Strengthening
Family Formation
Healthy Relationships and Marriage
Publication Date
2017-06-15
Section/Feed Type
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