In the 10 years since the American Family Survey — an annual collaboration by the Wheatley Institute at Brigham Young University, the Deseret News and BYU’s Center for the Study of Elections and Democracy — first surveyed thousands of Americans about their relationships and family experiences, a few things have remained unchanged: People worry about families generally, but they are happy with their own family; people want the government to help families; and people are concerned about how their kids are doing.
But one prominent change the American Family Survey has found over the past decade is a significant increase in economic concerns and a corresponding decline in Please log in to see the rest of this story.