Marriage as a 'luxury good': The class divide in who gets married and
divorced


*       Oct. 26, 2013 
*
<http://www.today.com/money/marriage-luxury-good-class-divide-who-gets-marri
ed-divorced-8C11457474> original 

. The demographics of who walks down the aisle have changed considerably in
recent years. 

Forget that old adage, first comes love, then comes marriage. These days,
it's more like, first comes college, a good job, maybe a house and a savings
account - and then we can talk about marriage.

As a battle rages over the rights of gay and lesbian couples to get married,
experts say the share of heterosexual Americans who are married has fallen
dramatically <http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2013/02/13/love-and-marriage/>
compared to decades past. What's more, the demographics of who is walking
down the aisle also have shifted substantially. 

In recent years, people with a college degree have become more likely to get
- and stay - married
<http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2010/11/18/the-decline-of-marriage-and-rise-
of-new-families/> than their less educated counterparts, and those who stay
married also tend to be much wealthier
<http://www.today.com/money/why-married-people-tend-be-wealthier-its-complic
ated-1C8364877>  than unmarried adults.

"Some people have talked about marriage as a luxury good," said Susan Brown,
a sociology professor at Bowling Green State University and co-director of
the National Center for Family and Marriage Research.

That's a stark switch from decades past, especially for women, according to
the research center
<http://www.bgsu.edu/offices/mc/news/2013/news133952.html> 's analysis of
government data on women's marriage patterns by education.

Back in the 1940s, college-educated women were the least likely to be
married. The opposite is true now. As of 2011, around 60 percent of women
with a college degrees were married, compared to less than 50 percent of
those with a high school degree or below, the analysis found.

"What we're seeing with marriage trends today mirrors what's happening in
our broader economy, where we're seeing diverging fortunes for those at the
upper and lower end of the spectrum, with rising inequality," Brown said. 

Some experts argue that marriage itself is contributing to rising
inequality, because people who are highly educated - and therefore have
higher income potential - are more likely to choose each other as spouses.

That's making it less likely that marriage itself will move someone up the
economic ladder, and increasing the chances that two low- or high-income
people will couple up and share their economic struggles, or fortunes.

"The doctor used to marry the nurse. Today, the doctor marries the doctor,"
said Bradford Wilcox, director of the National Marriage Project at the
University of Virginia, which has documented the rapid decline of marriage
<http://nationalmarriageproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/SOOU2012.pdf>
among people with just a high school degree.

There are lots of theories for why people are increasingly choosing spouses
with similar educational backgrounds - or feeling like they aren't in a
financial position to choose marriage at all. 

"We're setting a higher bar for marriage today," Wilcox said. "That bar is
not easily met for working class and poor women and men."

Christine Schwartz, an associate professor at the University of Wisconsin in
Madison who studies the relationship between marriage and inequality, said
one factor seems to be a growing preference toward egalitarian marriage.
That's in contrast to the old model of dividing tasks - the husband goes to
work while the wife takes care of the domestic tasks.

Another factor may be that both men and women, subconsciously or not, are
looking for a spouse who can provide financially.

"There's the economic reality that people ... often feel like they need two
earners in the family to meet a given standard of living," she said.

Education and social status has always been an attractive quality in
potential husbands, said Jeounghee Kim, an associate professor at Rutgers
University who studies marriage trends. But starting around 1990, she said,
"(Women's) economic status began to work pretty much like men's economic
status: The more education you have, the better economic prospects or
careers you have, you are more likely to get and stay married." 

Her research has shown that higher levels of education, and thus income
potential, also greatly reduce the likelihood of divorce - although that
effect is stronger for white women than for African-American women.

It's not just that college- educated people tend to choose each other -
experts say they also are more likely to choose marriage at all. 

Brown said that's partly to do with a growing sense that just to be marriage
material, a person needs to have already met certain financial milestones,
such as going to college or having a good, stable job. For many people with
low education and economic prospects, she said, those can become
insurmountable hurdles.

"It's not for lack of wanting to get married, or lack of interest," she
said. "I think it's a feeling that they're not in a stable . point in their
lives."

Instead, many people are choosing to live together without getting married,
and increasingly to have children without being married. But experts say
that in the United States, living together is is not proving to be a
replacement for marriage.

"Cohabitation has not become marriage-like," Kim said. "They're much less
stable. They don't last nearly as long."

Allison Linn is a reporter at CNBC. Follow her on Twitter @allisondlinn
<https://twitter.com/allisondlinn>  or send her an e-mail
<mailto:[email protected]> 

2013 CBNC

 

_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to