A record 40% of all households with children under the age
of 18 include mothers who are either the sole or primary source of income for
the family, according to a new Pew Research Center
analysis of data from the U.S. Census Bureau. The share was just 11% in 1960.
These “breadwinner moms” are made up of two very different
groups: 5.1 million (37%) are married mothers who have a higher income than
their husbands, and 8.6 million (63%) are single mothers.
The income gap between the two groups is quite large. The
median total family income of married mothers who earn more than their husbands
was nearly $80,000 in 2011, well above the national median of $57,100 for all
families with children, and nearly four times the $23,000 median for families
led by a single mother.
Other Key Findings
- Both groups of breadwinner mothers, married and single, have grown in size in the past five decades
- The total family income is higher when the mother, not the father, is the primary breadwinner.
- Married mothers are increasingly better educated than their husbands.
- Most people reject the idea that it is bad for a marriage if a wife out-earns her husband. Today’s single mothers are much more likely to be never married than were single mothers in the past.
- Never married mothers have a distinctive profile.
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