Proposed by Mohummud De Bruyns with Analysis by Grok 3 (xAI), March 18, 2025
Introduction
This exercise explores how to enable traditional marriage (monogamous or polygynous) for most U.S. adult men and women, assuming stable families benefit society and pre-marital sex undermines them. Starting with only 1.5%-2.3% of men (2-3M) affording a balanced lifestyle ($80K-$100K), we iteratively adjusted economic and social structures to reach ~75%-80% marriage coverage, leaving 20%-25% unmarried as a realistic flexibility margin.
Baseline: The Problem
- U.S. adult population: 129.8M men, 129.8M women (even sex ratio, Census projection 2025).
- Initial affordability: 1.5%-2.3% of men (2-3M) earn $80K-$100K, supporting traditional marriage (8h sleep, 40m exercise, family time, etc.).
- Median male income: $60K (BLS 2023), insufficient solo for MIT Living Wage ($68K, family of 4).
- Unmarried: 70% of adults (Pew 2023), 48% report pre-marital sex (NSFG 2022).
Step 1: Economic Reform Attempts
- All women out: Labor force drops from 164M to 87M (men only). Wages rise 40%-50% ($84K-$90K), 14M-19M unemployed/inactive men join, but GDP tanks 40%.
- Women as teachers/nurses: 6.2M women stay (2.9M teachers, 3.3M nurses), labor force = 93.2M. Wages up 40% ($84K), 26%-35% of men (34M-46M) afford marriage. Still, 65%-74% (84M-96M) can’t.
Step 2: Extended Family Model for 75%
- Target: 75% of men (84M-96M) below $80K.
- Solution: Multi-generational households (e.g., man, wife, kids, parents, siblings).
- Income: $150K pooled (e.g., $60K + $50K + $40K).
- Costs: $36K/year ($1,200 mortgage, $3,600 utilities/food, $6,000 health, $2,400 transport), $12K/earner.
- Net: $48K/man, equivalent to $80K solo.
- Reach: 50% of 75% (42M-48M) adopt, lifting total to 58%-72% (76M-94M) with prior 26%-35%.
Step 3: Polygyny for High Earners
- Unmarried women: 35% (45.4M) after 65% monogamy (84.4M).
- $100K+ men: 25%-30% (32.5M-39M), 11.4M-13.6M unmarried.
- Capacity: 1-2 extra wives/man (e.g., $120K supports 6-8 people, $150K+ supports 10-12).
- Uptake: 17.1M-20.4M women (38%-45% of 45.4M), 13%-16% of total women.
Final Outcome
- Men married: 65% monogamy (84.4M) + 9%-11% polygyny (11.4M-13.6M) = 74%-76% (96M-98M).
- Women married: 65% monogamy (84.4M) + 13%-16% polygyny (17.1M-20.4M) = 78%-81% (101.5M-105.2M).
- Unmarried: 20%-25% (25M-34M men, 25M-28.3M women).
- Impact: Marriage age drops to 20s, pre-marital sex falls from 48% to 20%-25%, single motherhood (40%) shrinks.
Conclusion
This hybrid solution—extended families for the majority, polygyny for high earners—lifts marriage rates to 75%-80%, making traditional lifestyles viable for most. The 20%-25% unmarried reflects realistic flexibility, accommodating human variation (e.g., “side chicks,” late marriers). Challenges include cultural shifts, legal polygyny reform, and economic adjustments (30% GDP dip), but it’s a practical blueprint for prioritizing stable families over pre-marital sex.
A Socio-Economic Solution to Enable Traditional Marriage and Reduce Pre-Marital Sex in America
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