Volume 41 - Article 29 | Pages 847–872
Homeownership after separation: A longitudinal analysis of Finnish register data
By Marika Jalovaara, Hill Kulu
This article is part of the Special Collection 27 "Separation, Divorce, and Residential Mobility in a Comparative Perspective"
Abstract
Background: Divorce and separation have become common life-course events in many European countries. Previous studies show that separated individuals are likely to move from homeownership to renting and to experience a period of residential instability. However, little is known about postseparation homeownership levels in the long run.
Objective: This paper investigates homeownership levels after union dissolution. We extend previous research by examining changes in homeownership levels after separation by time (since union dissolution) and across population subgroups. We study whether and how postseparation homeownership levels are associated with repartnering and gender.
Methods: We use Finnish register data and logistic regression analysis.
Results: Compared to partnered individuals, homeownership levels among recently separated individuals are low. With increasing time since union dissolution, homeownership levels increase. However, the levels are high only among repartnered persons and remain low among separated individuals who remain single. Homeownership levels are slightly lower among separated women than among separated men.
Contribution: The study shows the short- and long-term effects of separation on individuals’ housing careers. After separation many individuals move from homeownership to rental accommodation, and most previous renters continue to rent. Separated individuals who form new unions are likely to move or return to homeownership. By contrast, those who remain unpartnered following separation have a low likelihood of living in owner-occupied dwellings. This likely reflects both individuals’ choices and their constrained opportunities in a country with high homeownership aspirations and levels.
Author's Affiliation
- Marika Jalovaara - Turun Yliopisto (University of Turku), Finland EMAIL
- Hill Kulu - University of St Andrews, United Kingdom EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Social policies, separation, and second birth spacing in Western Europe
Volume 37 - Article 37
Educational trends in cohort fertility by birth order: A comparison of England and Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland
Volume 51 - Article 36
A register-based account of period trends in union prevalence, entries, and exits by educational level for men and women in Finland
Volume 48 - Article 14
Union formation and fertility amongst immigrants from Pakistan and their descendants in the United Kingdom: A multichannel sequence analysis
Volume 48 - Article 10
Separation, divorce, and housing tenure: A cross-country comparison
Volume 41 - Article 39
Union dissolution and housing trajectories in Britain
Volume 41 - Article 7
A decade of life-course research on fertility of immigrants and their descendants in Europe
Volume 40 - Article 46
Co-ethnic marriage versus intermarriage among immigrants
and their descendants: A comparison across seven European countries using event-history analysis
Volume 39 - Article 17
From never partnered to serial cohabitors: Union trajectories to childlessness
Volume 36 - Article 55
Why does fertility remain high among certain UK-born ethnic minority women?
Volume 35 - Article 49
Introduction to research on immigrant and ethnic minority families in Europe
Volume 35 - Article 2
Are there gender differences in family trajectories by education in Finland?
Volume 33 - Article 44
Union formation and dissolution among immigrants and their descendants in the United Kingdom
Volume 33 - Article 10
Homogamy in socio-economic background and education, and the dissolution of cohabiting unions
Volume 30 - Article 65
Does his paycheck also matter?: The socioeconomic resources of co-residential partners and entry into parenthood in Finland
Volume 28 - Article 31
Recent fertility patterns of Finnish women by union status: A descriptive account
Volume 28 - Article 14
Premarital cohabitation and divorce: Support for the "Trial Marriage" Theory?
Volume 23 - Article 31
A review of the antecedents of union dissolution
Volume 23 - Article 10
High Suburban Fertility: Evidence from Four Northern European Countries
Volume 21 - Article 31
Migration and union dissolution in a changing socio-economic context: The case of Russia
Volume 17 - Article 27
Fertility differences by housing type: The effect of housing conditions or of selective moves?
Volume 17 - Article 26
Family change and migration in the life course: An introduction
Volume 17 - Article 19
Socioeconomic differentials in divorce risk by duration of marriage
Volume 7 - Article 16
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