Father-absence: Article
#2
Study
Finds Teen Pregnancy
and
Crime Levels Higher In Home With Father Absent Kids
Children reared in fatherless homes are
more than twice as likely to become male adolescent delinquents or teen
mothers, according to a significant new study by two economists at the
University of California, Santa Barbara.
Llad Phillips and William S. Comanor based
their research on data from random surveys of 15,000 youths conducted annually
by the Center for Human Resources at Ohio State University. Their findings
suggest that current proposals to provide tax credits and exemptions for
single mothers and to collect more child support from absent fathers will
have little effect on the problem of delinquency among teenage boys.
"Both measures tacitly accept the father's
absence from the home and seek to ameliorate its consequences by increasing
the income available to mother and child. However, it requires an increase
in family income of approximately $50,000 to counter the father's absence,"
the economists wrote in a report outlining the results of their study,
which were presented at the Western Economics Association meeting in San
Francisco on July 1.
Phillips and Comanor designed their study
to account for the influence of income, and found that in the case of boys,
a minimum of $54,000 in additional family income is necessary to counter
the harmful effects of absent fathers. For girls, the figure is much lower-$17,000
a year. The researchers also found that while absent mothers have a negligible
impact on male adolescent delinquency, motherless homes are 56 percent
more likely to result in teen pregnancy among girls.
"The absence of either parent has a significant
effect on the kids having one kind of pathology or another, but the absence
of a father tends to have a more significant effect, and it seems to more
seriously affect the sons," said Phillips, whose research also indicates
that step-fathers may in fact contribute to the problem.
"The effect of the presence or absence
of moms and dads on childbearing at a young age among girls are more equal
than their effect on delinquency by boys."
Phillips and Comanor are about to embark
on a study of delinquency among teenage girls, which is on the rise despite
being far less prevalent than delinquency among adolescent boys.
"A lot of kids get involved in crime long
before they are able to make rational choices about crime vs. legitimate
work," Phillips says. "And that's our motivation in doing this research-finding
out the importance of the family in the whole process."
SOURCE: "Men's HOTLINE" (men@menhotline.org)
|