GALLUP NEWS SERVICE
PRINCETON, N.J. - According to a survey conducted this year by the Gallup Organization in sixteen countries on four continents, the world is a long way from sharing a global set of family values. The survey reveals wide variation in perceptions of the ideal number of children for a family to have, in people's preferences for having boy versus girl children, and in the degree to which people consider having children to be an important part of their lives.
The issue generating the most diverse reactions in this new international Gallup survey, however, is the morality of unmarried couples having children. This was the defining issue in the family values debate in the United States in 1992 when Dan Quayle attacked the TV sitcom character Murphy Brown, saying that she was glorifying single motherhood.
In some countries, particularly in Western Europe, having a child out of wedlock is widely condoned; in others, particularly in Asia, it is widely frowned upon. The United States stands out as the country most morally conflicted over the issue, with 47% of Americans saying it is wrong and 50% saying it is not wrong.
How Many Children is Ideal?
The recent Gallup International Poll also records a wide range of
opinions about the ideal number of children, with substantial
majorities of adults in some countries favoring large families
(defined as three or more children), and substantial majorities in
others preferring small families.
The United States appears more traditional in its response to this question than most of the other highly developed countries surveyed. Americans favor small families by only a slim 50% to 41% margin. By comparison, 77% of those polled in Germany favor small families, 67% in England and 61% in Canada. The French views on family size are quite similar to the Americans.
Boys Generally Preferred
When asked to say which gender they would prefer if they could have
just one child, Gallup finds a moderate preference around the world
for boys. Many adults say gender would not matter, but among those
who make a choice, boys are generally preferred over girls.
This preference for a male child is particularly strong in Thailand and India, where boys are favored over girls by double-digit margins and where the percentage of people saying they have no preference is quite low. In the U.S. 42% of those surveyed have no preference, but among those who do, boys are favored by a 12 point margin, 35% to 23%.
Children Are Important
A majority of adults in almost all of the countries included in the
survey -- Germany and the U.S. being the exceptions -- say that
having a child is necessary to their feeling personally fulfilled
in life.
This sentiment is much more widespread in some countries, however, than in others. About nine out of ten adults in Hungary, India and Taiwan agree with the statement that having children is necessary for fulfillment. The number is closer to six in ten in Europe, Mexico and Canada. In Germany and the United States Gallup found less than a majority of adults feel having children is necessary for their personal fulfillment.
No Gender Gap on Family Values
While family values concerning children tend to differ from country
to country, Gallup finds that men and women within each country
generally subscribe to the same values on three of the four
questions. On a country by country basis, men and women have
similar attitudes about out-of-wedlock births and the ideal family
size. They also attach similar levels of importance to having
children.
On the other hand, gender preference is the one question asked in the International Gallup Poll where men and women clearly differ. Men around the world, but particularly in the U.S. and in several less well-developed countries, show a solid preference for boys. Women, on the other hand, tend to have either no clear gender preference for children, or only a slight preference for boys.
There is more variation within countries by age groups than there is by gender, but even these differences are small compared with those across nations. One age difference of particular note can be found in the U.S., where a majority of respondents aged 55 and older say it is morally wrong for an unmarried couple to have a baby, while a majority of young adults say it is not.
U.S. More Traditional than Europe
Adults in Western Europe, particularly in Germany, Great Britain
and Spain, emerge as the most liberal, or non-traditional, in their
outlook toward children when their opinions on the four major
family values issues are looked at collectively. At the
conservative end of the spectrum are the Asian nations of Thailand,
Taiwan, Singapore and India. Americans fall squarely in the middle,
expressing a mixture of traditional and non-traditional
attitudes.
Adults in the remaining seven countries surveyed give a mix of traditional and non-traditional responses to the family values questions posed by Gallup. In addition to the U.S., this middle group includes France, Iceland, Mexico, Hungary, Colombia, Lithuania and Canada.
METHODOLOGY
This International Gallup Poll on Children was conducted in sixteen
countries in Asia, Europe, North America, and Latin America,
between February and May of 1997. The countries selected for
inclusion were those in which The Gallup Organization currently
operates a wholly-owned subsidiary and/or joint venture company,
and where ongoing nation-wide public opinion surveys (as opposed to
market research polling) were in place at the time of the study.
These are Canada, Colombia, France, Germany, Great Britain,
Guatemala, Hungary, Iceland, India, Lithuania, Mexico, Singapore,
Spain, Taiwan, Thailand, and the United States.
Surveys in most of the countries are nationally representative, with the exceptions of India, Colombia and Mexico where interviews were restricted to urban areas.
Results from each country are based on samplings of the adult population, typically 1000 or more interviews with those aged 18 and older, and the data for each country have an associated sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points. More information about the study is available upon request.
Do you think it is, or is not, morally wrong for a couple to have a baby if they are not married?
Wrong | Not Wrong | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
India | 84% | 14 | ||
Singapore | 69% | 11 | ||
Taiwan | 55% | 26 | ||
United States | 47% | 50 | ||
Guatemala | 38% | 56 | ||
Thailand | 37% | 57 | ||
Mexico | 31% | 67 | ||
Canada | 25% | 72 | ||
Great Britain | 25% | 73 | ||
Spain | 21% | 73 | ||
Lithuania | 16% | 75 | ||
Hungary | 16% | 81 | ||
Colombia | 10% | 87 | ||
Germany | 9% | 90 | ||
France | 8% | 91 | ||
Iceland | 3% | 95 | ||
Note: "No opinion" omitted. | ||||
0 - 2 | 3 or more | |
---|---|---|
Iceland | 26% | 69 |
Guatemala | 35% | 61 |
Taiwan | 41% | 52 |
United States | 50% | 41 |
France | 51% | 49 |
Singapore | 53% | 47 |
Mexico | 56% | 42 |
Canada | 61% | 33 |
Lithuania | 63% | 33 |
Great Britain | 67% | 24 |
Thailand | 69% | 30 |
Hungary | 73% | 24 |
Colombia | 77% | 23 |
Germany | 77% | 17 |
Spain | 77% | 18 |
India | 87% | 12 |
Note: "No opinion" omitted. |
Boy | Girl | No opinion | |
---|---|---|---|
Taiwan | 29% | 9 | 62 |
Thailand | 44% | 27 | 29 |
Hungary | 25% | 12 | 63 |
India | 40% | 27 | 33 |
United States | 35% | 23 | 42 |
Guatemala | 23% | 13 | 64 |
Canada | 26% | 16 | 58 |
France | 41% | 31 | 28 |
Singapore | 19% | 11 | 70 |
Colombia | 35% | 27 | 38 |
Mexico | 31% | 24 | 45 |
Great Britain | 31% | 26 | 43 |
Germany | 21% | 19 | 60 |
Lithuania | 33% | 34 | 33 |
Iceland | 12% | 16 | 72 |
Spain | 20% | 27 | 53 |
Note: "No opinion" omitted. |
Yes | No | |
---|---|---|
Hungary | 94% | 6 |
India | 93% | 6 |
Taiwan | 87% | 3 |
Iceland | 85% | 13 |
Thailand | 85% | 13 |
Lithuania | 82% | 10 |
Singapore | 81% | 7 |
Guatemala | 74% | 23 |
France | 73% | 26 |
Colombia | 72% | 26 |
Mexico | 61% | 38 |
Spain | 60% | 35 |
Canada | 59% | 37 |
Great Britain | 57% | 41 |
Germany | 49% | 45 |
United States | 46% | 51 |
Note: "No opinion" omitted. |