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For most racial and ethnic groups, men are more likely than women to be unpartnered. This is higher than the shares among Hispanic (38 percent), white (33 percent) and Asian (29 percent) adults. As Pew pointed out:Īmong those ages 25 to 54, 59 percent of Black adults were unpartnered in 2019. Of course, the unmarried and unpartnered portions of the population vary among demographic groups. We are nearing a time when there will be more unmarried adults in the United States than married ones, a development with enormous consequences for how we define family and adulthood in general, as well as how we structure taxation and benefits. This came on the heels of data released by the National Center for Health Statistics last year, which showed that marriage rates in 2018 had reached a record low. This month, the Pew Research Center published an analysis of census data showing that in 2019 the share of American adults who were neither married nor living with a partner had risen to 38 percent, and while that group “includes some adults who were previously married (those who are separated, divorced or widowed), all of the growth in the unpartnered population since 1990 has come from a rise in the number who have never been married.” This trend has only continued, and we are now nearing a milestone. By the time I became an adult, that number was approaching 20 percent. The year I was born, 1970, the percentage of Americans between the ages of 25 and 50 who had never married was just 9 percent. It was the way it had always been, and always would be.īut even then, the share of people who were married was already falling. You would - and should - meet someone, get married and start a family. When I was young, everything in society seemed to aim one toward marriage.