>>17217840Almost a third of adult single men live with a parent. Single men are much more likely to be unemployed, financially fragile and to lack a college degree than those with a partner. They’re also likely to have lower median earnings; single men earned less in 2019 than in 1990, even adjusting for inflation. Single women, meanwhile, earn the same as they did 30 years ago, but those with partners have increased their earnings by 50%.
These are the some of the findings of a new Pew Research analysis of 2019 data on the growing gap between American adults who live with a partner and those who do not. While the study is less about the effect of marriage and more about the effect that changing economic circumstances have hadonmarriage, it sheds light on some unexpected outcomes of shifts in the labor market.The trend has not had an equal impact across all sectors of society. The Pew study, which uses information from the2019 American Community Survey, notes that men are now more likely to be single than women, which was not the case 30 years ago.Black people are much more likely to be single (59%) than any other race, and Black women (62%) are the most likely to be single of any sector. Asian people (29%) are the least likely to be single, followed by whites (33%) and Hispanics (38%).
https://time.com/6104105/more-single-men-than-women/Remember /pol/ two thirds of sheboons are eggcels, and 3 quarters of bucks are virgins well into their 20s