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The Effects of Single Families in the United States.

 

No longer do we look to shows like "Leave it to Beaver", "Brady Bunch" for our views on family life. Our Social Security Retirement fund was built in the last century encouraging marriage. Now that there is a growing number of single homes, what kind of impact will this have in the future on our Social Security, will there be enough benefits for everyone? .
             Michelle Conlin also stated "The notion that married people lose out because they pay more in taxes through the oft-cited marriage penalty is only partly true. Dual-income, high-earning marrieds and low-income couples sometimes suffer the penalty, but for slightly more than half of all spouses, marriage actually slashes tax bills, particularly for those with children. That means, for example that mega-salary executives with stay-at-home wives get subsidies that single working mothers don't"(108). This appears to me to show that our government is rewarding those who are married, because less taxes are taken from a married adult than that from a single, but a married couple is able to claim more of a tax break on there taxes. This may seem unfair to many but you also have to remember in today's society it seems most married couples have two incomes coming in which in turn places a larger tax on the couple. Due to there being more single workers this has increased our Social Security income for the time being. But in the workplace unmarried people make up to an average of 25% less than those that are married. This is mainly due to the marriage-centric of health-care benefits, retirements, calculates "Thomas F. Coleman" a lawyer who heads the Los Angeles-based American Society for Single people (qrd. In Conlin, 108).
             Also according to Michelle Conlin "In the civic arena, rising school taxes and growing inequities in pensions between marrieds and singles represent a big bonus for legal couples. The unmarried are often subject to discrimination in housing and credit applications.


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