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By Robert Rector
Marriage is a fundamental social institution, deeply rooted in all societies, that has been tested and reaffirmed over thousands of years. The erosion of the institution of marriage over the past four decades has had large-scale negative effects on children and adults and lies at the heart of many social problems with which government is currently grappling. The beneficial effects of marriage, both for individuals and for society, are beyond reasonable dispute. There is a broad and growing consensus that government policy should promote rather than discourage healthy marriage.The Healthy Marriage Initiative will provide individuals and couples with information on the value of marriage to men, women, and children; teach conflict resolution skills that will increase marital happiness and stability; and experiment in reducing the financial penalties against marriage among welfare programs. All participation in the program would be voluntary. The primary focus of these marriage programs would be preventative, not reparative. They would seek to prevent the isolation and poverty of welfare mothers by intervening at an early point before a pattern of broken relationships and welfare dependence had emerged. By fostering better life decisions and stronger relationship skills, marriage programs can increase child well-being and adult happiness and reduce child poverty and welfare dependence. Congress should promote healthy marriage within other social service programs that address problems related to the collapse of marriage, such as domestic violence programs within the Department of Justice.
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