- when America was more of a farming country, kids were needed as free labor. But now we are no longer a country of small family farms.
- the pill only became legal in 1970: https://www.ourbodiesourselves.org/book-excerpts/health-arti... Widely-available, effective, and no-stigma birth control is a rather recent thing, and without it, you get kids, and kids need adults - usually more than 1 - to raise them.
- in past generations, women were financially dependent on men, so marrying was required. Women can be self-sufficient now.
- in the 60's, a young couple could own a home, car, boat, motorcycle on the husband's income, and have a couple of kids. My parents, like many others, did it right after high school and my dad worked at a grocery store as a bagboy and then butcher. The economy has changed a lot in the last few generations (60 years) and raising a family right out of high school is no longer a slam dunk.
- college tuition has become completely unreasonable. My generation could pay for college with a part-time job. The next generation needed lots of financial help from parents. The current generation is taking out huge co-signed loans that are like buying a house, and going into a marriage with a couple having two of those loans is a scary proposition IMO.
- in previous generations women raised the kids because they didn't work. Now that women work, daycare corporations raise kids, and daycare is expensive. A couple needs 2 cars & insurance for both. In the 60's, women didn't have cars. In the 70's, women (mothers) had a "beater" car. In the 80's, more women worked part time and got decent cars, like with air conditioning! Today, working women want a nice car just like their husbands have, and cars today are expensive: most car loans are 5-7 years now
I suspect if kids could graduate from high school, own a home, 2 cars, and raise a couple of kids on one parent's income, or both parents work part-time, more people would get married and do just that.
Over the years I have learned how to change and adapt and compromise and I learned I wasn’t mature enough to get married but I love her so we did.
My point is that it’s hard and I think folks are understanding that more and more now and deciding they likely don’t need the ceremony or the cost to show commitment to someone.
Just my two cents.