Volume 38 - Article 41 | Pages 1241–1276
Why does women’s education stabilize marriages? The role of marital attraction and barriers to divorce
By Diederik Boertien , Juho Härkönen
Abstract
Background: Despite widespread attention paid to the negative correlation between female education and divorce, we lack an explanation for it. In this study we use social exchange theory to assess two broad groups of explanations. According to the ‘marital attraction’ explanation, educated women’s marriages have higher marital quality and marital satisfaction. According to the ‘barriers to divorce’ explanation, educated women’s marriages include factors that raise the cost of divorcing. Many previous studies have referred to variants of the former explanation, whereas the latter has been less prominent. Our objective is to investigate the explanatory power of these two explanations.
Methods: We use discrete-time event history models to document the educational gradient of divorce from first marriages using the British Household Panel Survey (N = 1,263) for the years 1996–2009. We subsequently perform a mediation analysis to explain the educational gradient in divorce and a path analysis to distinguish which factors shape marital attraction and barriers to divorce.
Results: Female education is positively related to marital stability, but this association is only partly explained by educational differences in marital satisfaction and variables that shape attractions. Variables interpreted as affecting barriers to divorce, such as home ownership and having divorced parents, provide an at least equally important explanation of the educational gradient in divorce.
Contribution: This paper shows that the negative female educational gradient of divorce is shaped not only by educational differences in marital attraction, but also by differences in barriers to divorce.
Author's Affiliation
- Diederik Boertien - Centre d'Estudis Demogràfics (CED), Spain EMAIL
- Juho Härkönen - European University Institute, Italy EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Lowest low fertility in Spain: Insights from the 2018 Spanish Fertility Survey
Volume 51 - Article 19
Pathways and obstacles to parenthood among women in same-sex couples in Spain
Volume 50 - Article 35
Do same-sex unions dissolve more often than different-sex unions? Methodological insights from Colombian data on sexual behavior
Volume 44 - Article 48
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Between money and intimacy: Brideprice, marriage, and women’s position in contemporary China
Volume 50 - Article 46
| Keywords:
brideprice,
China,
divorce,
family,
family law,
gender inequalities,
marriage
Age-heterogamous partnerships: Prevalence and partner differences by marital status and gender composition
Volume 50 - Article 23
| Keywords:
age heterogamy,
assortative mating,
cohabitation,
marriage,
same-sex couples,
unions
Ultra-Orthodox fertility and marriage in the United States: Evidence from the American Community Survey
Volume 49 - Article 29
| Keywords:
age at first marriage,
American Community Survey (ACS),
fertility,
Judaism,
marriage,
religion,
total fertility rate (TFR),
Ultra-Orthodox Judaism
Do couples who use fertility treatments divorce more? Evidence from the US National Survey of Family Growth
Volume 49 - Article 23
| Keywords:
childbirth,
divorce,
fertility treatments,
socioeconomic determinants
Separation as an accelerator of housing inequalities: Parents’ and children’s post-separation housing careers in Sweden
Volume 49 - Article 4
| Keywords:
divorce,
family,
housing,
income inequality,
neighborhood,
parental separation,
residential mobility,
stratification
Cited References: 80
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar