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Ten important research findings on marriage and choosing a marriage partner

 

-Helpful Facts for Young Adults-
 
1. Marrying as a teenager is the highest known risk factor for divorce.

People who marry in their teens are two to three times more likely to divorce than people who marry in their twenties or older.
 

2. The most likely way to find a future marriage partner is through an introduction by family, friends, or acquaintances.

Despite the romantic notion that people meet and fall in love through chance or fate, the evidence suggests that social networks are important in bringing together individuals of similar interests and backgrounds, especially when it comes to selecting a marriage partner. According to a large-scale national survey of sexuality, almost sixty percent of married people were introduced by family, friends, co-workers or other acquaintances.

3. The more similar people are in their values, backgrounds and life goals, the more likely they are to have a successful marriage.

Opposites may attract but they may not live together harmoniously as married couples. People who share common backgrounds and similar social networks are better suited as marriage partners than people who are very different in their backgrounds and networks.  

4. Women have a significantly better chance of marrying if they do not become single parents before marrying.

Having a child out of wedlock reduces the chances of ever marrying. Despite the growing numbers of potential marriage partners with children, one study noted, "having children is still one of the least desirable characteristics a potential marriage partner can possess." The only partner characteristic men and women rank as even less desirable than having children is the inability to hold a steady job.

5. Both women and men who are college educated are more likely to marry, and less likely to divorce, than people with lower levels of education.

Despite occasional news stories predicting lifelong singlehood for college-educated women, these predictions have proven false. Though the first generation of college educated women (those who earned baccalaureate degrees in the 1920s) married less frequently than their less well-educated peers, the reverse is true today. College educated women's chances of marrying are better than less well-educated women. However, the growing gender gap in college education may make it more difficult for college women to find similarly well-educated men in the future. This is already a problem for African-American female college graduates, who greatly outnumber African-American male college graduates.  

6. Living together before marriage has not proved useful as a "trial marriage."  

People who have multiple cohabiting relationships before marriage are more likely to experience marital conflict, marital unhappiness and eventual divorce than people who do not cohabit before marriage. Researchers attribute some but not all of these differences to the differing characteristics of people who cohabit, the so-called "selection effect," rather than to the experience of cohabiting itself. It has been hypothesized that the negative effects of cohabitation on future marital success may diminish as living together becomes a common experience among today's young adults. However, according to one recent study of couples who were married between 1981 and 1997, the negative effects persist among younger cohorts, supporting the view that the cohabitation experience itself contributes to problems in marriage.  

7. Marriage helps people to generate income and wealth.  

Compared to those who merely live together, people who marry become economically better off. Men become more productive after marriage; they earn between ten and forty percent more than do single men with similar education and job histories. Marital social norms that encourage healthy, productive behavior and wealth accumulation play a role. Some of the greater wealth of married couples results from their more efficient specialization and pooling of resources, and because they save more. Married people also receive more money from family members than the unmarried (including cohabiting couples), probably because families consider marriage more permanent and more binding than a living-together union.  

8. People who are married are more likely to have emotionally and physically satisfying sex lives than single people or those who just live together.

Contrary to the popular belief that married sex is boring and infrequent, married people report higher levels of sexual satisfaction than both sexually active singles and cohabiting couples, according to the most comprehensive and recent survey of sexuality. Forty-two percent of wives said that they found sex extremely emotionally and physically satisfying, compared to just 31 percent of single women who had a sex partner. And 48 percent of husbands said sex was extremely satisfying emotionally, compared to just 37 percent of cohabiting men. The higher level of commitment in marriage is probably the reason for the high level of reported sexual satisfaction; marital commitment contributes to a greater sense of trust and security, less drug and alcohol-infused sex, and more mutual communication between the couple.

9. People who grow up in a family broken by divorce are slightly less likely to marry, and much more likely to divorce when they do marry.  

According to one study the divorce risk nearly triples if one marries someone who also comes from a broken home. The increased risk is much lower, however, if the marital partner is someone who grew up in a happy, intact family.  

10. For large segments of the population, the risk of divorce is far below fifty percent.  

Although the overall divorce rate in America remains close to fifty percent of all marriages, it has been dropping gradually over the past two decades. Also, the risk of divorce is far below fifty percent for educated people going into their first marriage, and lower still for people who wait to marry at least until their mid-twenties, haven't lived with many different partners prior to marriage, or are strongly religious and marry someone of the same faith.   

(This list was taken from the National Marriage Project’s Ten Things to Know Series)

 

If you found this article informational, you might also enjoy the series on Marriage Education:

The successful marriage - Can it be learned?

Utah supports strong and healthy marriages as a priority

 

 
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Comments

  • jane Ganahl 2 years ago
    Report Abuse

    readers beware of these "facts." since this article is supposedly aimed at young adults, here's another: never accept "facts" unless the studies are cited. as a journalist who has covered the unmarried life for almost ten years, i can tell you that the national marriage project is funded by right-wing organizations, and their facts are always suspect. if you want the other side of the story, go to the website for the alternatives to marriage project, and get educated. marriage is NOT the end of the rainbow for everyone. learn the facts.

  • Singletude: A Positive Blog for Singles 2 years ago
    Report Abuse

    I have to agree with Jane Ganahl. Another great source for counterarguments is the book <i>Singled Out</i> by Bella DePaulo, a social psychologist who debunks many of the biased studies that suggest marriage is a panacea for all social ills.

    Not all the points above are off base, though. For example, married couples really do make out better than singles financially. After all, they're entitled to over 1,100 legal and financial perks that singles don't get.

    Does this mean we should all get married...or work for a more equitable system in which no one is unfairly privileged? You decide.

  • Walter Fitzsimmons 2 years ago
    Report Abuse

    RE: Jane Ganahl

    "i can tell you that the national marriage project is funded by right-wing organizations, and their facts are always suspect."

    What is "suspect" about these facts? And where did "right-wing" come into the equation?

    I read through this list and my response is... "Duh!" If a girl gets pregnant in her teens and isn't married, of course it will be more difficult for her to get married later on. and "Duh!" If two people come from similar backgrounds and have similar goals, they'll be more likely to have a successful marriage. Where is the "suspect" part?

    What facts do the "Left-Wing" organizations show? Maybe this... "If you are hyper-sensitive about people and organizations encouraging marriage, you're more likely to be a sad or bitter person who probably will have difficulty being married anyway, so don't even try?"

    Relax.

  • Filipina Girl 2 years ago
    Report Abuse

    Helpful article in here. But I think it depends every couple on how they will handle their marriage either they will work it out or not. They should have the commit in the relationship that they will work it out at all costs unless something abusive happens or one party falls out of love despite the effort in saving the relationship.

    ----------------
    Meet beautiful Filipina girls for Philippines Dating at www[dot]cebuanas[dot[com]

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