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The American nuclear family is officially dead, according to a new analysis from the Pew Research Center — even if some Americans haven't accepted it. In 1970, nearly 70% of American adults ages 25 to 49 were living with a spouse and at least one child. "Family living arrangements are becoming more and more diverse in their composition," Carolina Aragão, one of the authors of the Pew report, told Insider. While married adults with kids are still the most common family arrangement, "they are far less common than they were in the past." AdvertisementAdvertisementBut even as the American family changes, it doesn't mean Americans feel good about it.
Persons: haven't, that's, they're, Z, who's, That's, Aragão, Pew Organizations: Pew Research, Service, Pew Research Center, Pew, Census Bureau, Black, Hispanic Locations: Wall, Silicon, Carolina, United States
The overall fertility rate was 56.1 births per 1,000 women ages 15-44, holding relatively steady from the rate of 56.3 in 2021. After a sharp drop in 2020, birth rates rose in 2021 — the first increase since 2014 — but the numbers still reflect a decline that began before the pandemic. When people have their first child later, they tend to have fewer children overall, Levine explained. Birth rates among women in their late 30s and early 40s rose in the last decade, and the birth rate among women over 45 also exceeded one birth per 1,000 population for the first time in more than a decade. Meanwhile, the teen birth rate dropped to a record low in 2022.
Persons: Phil Levine, Levine, ” Levine, , Carolina Aragão, ” Aragão Organizations: US Centers for Disease Control, Wellesley College, Brookings Institution, CNN, Pew Research Center, CDC Locations: Carolina
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