Single mothers a growing U.S. concern
BOSTON, Sept. 7 (UPI) -- The number of single mothers in the
United States is steadily increasing and their lower incomes are a
major concern, an expert says.
Northeastern University economist Andrew Sum said with the
percentage of single mothers eclipsing 50 percent of all births to
women under the age of 30 in 2006, the potential concerns for
society are growing in kind, The Kansas City (Mo.) Star reported
Sunday.
Sum, who heads up the Boston school's Center for Labor
Market Studies, said those among the 50.4 percent of 2006 births
typically are thrust into a near-financial crisis due to a limited
income.
"The inequality of incomes in these families is
unbelievable," he said. "Forty percent are poor, or near-poor. A
large fraction is dependent on public assistance. Unless the mother
is very well-educated and has a bachelor's degree or above, there's
a huge fiscal cost to the rest of us."
Missouri resident Sara Bell echoed Sum's findings, telling
the Star that having two children on her own while trying to earn a
living and a college degree was exhausting.
"There were times when I was like, 'This is why people marry
when they have a kid,'" Bell told the newspaper.
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