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Modern Myths About Cohabitation

  • JAY COPP

Nearly 4 million couples were living together outside marriage in 1990, eight times as many as in 1970, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.


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Copp: What is a major drawback of cohabitation?

Waite: People who cohabit are more likely to get a divorce. We know that's true in every society where it's been studied Sweden, Canada, the United States. People who cohabit say they do so to find out more about the person before they marry them. It doesn't work that way. If it orked that way and if people who lived together got more information to make a better marital choice then people who cohabit should be less likely to get a divorce than people who married. In fact, it works just the opposite.

Why is divorce more common in cohabitation?

It's pretty clear that cohabitation changes people's attitudes toward marriage and divorce. It makes them more accepting of divorce and less positive about marriage as an institution. People who think divorce is an option invest less in their marriage. Because they think marriage is something they can get out of, they keep their exit doors open. I think a lot of people who cohabit don't want marriage. What they want is something with lower costs, and it may be the benefits are commensurate with the costs. There's a little bit of evidence that cohabiting is really bad for women with children. The uncertainty about the future of the relationship has big costs inemotional well-being for the children - depression and so on.

What about the rates of domestic violence?

Seventeen percent of cohabiting couples, who had no plans to marry said their arguments became physical over the last year. It was 14% for cohabiting couples who plan to many and 6% for married couples.

How about faithfulness?

Both men and women who are cohabiting are substantially more likely to report they had a second sex partner in the last year, although almost all married partners and cohabiting couples expected the relationship to be monogamous. You have to be careful about cause and effect. But a study at Brigham Young followed women over time and found that when women got married, the chances they had a second partner went way down. So their argument is that marriage causes a change in people's faithfulness..

So what exactly are the benefitsof marriage, according to studies?

Longer life, better physical health, better emotional health, more satisfying sex life, better options for kids, improved career prospects for men. Marriage delivers benefits in different ways for men and women.

How's that?

Women tend to manage the family's emotional life. Women also manage health care and health behaviors in families. So married men have someone who has a big investment in what they're doing and watches out for their health. They also have somebody who is watching out for their emotional well-being.

In what way is men's health better?

Married men are less likely to drink, less likely to drink and drive. Drug usage goes down. Emotional health seems to get better.

So wives nagging their husbands is a good thing?

I think it's true. The reason that men's health iproves when they get married is they sort of clean up their act They reduce drinking and smoking. They live more orderly, healthy lives. One of the reasons they do so is because their wives won't put up with them coming home at midnight from the bar with their buddies. They have a home, a family, someone who matters to them. They do things they wouldn't otherwise do. They sit down for dinner with their wives instead of grabbing a cheeseburger and a six-pack.

Tell me about the financial benefits of marriage?

They're pretty striking. Any two people living together and working will have a better standard of living. This benefit is available to both cohabits and married people. But marriage improves men's career prospects. So they earn more. And something about marriage encourages people to save and invest. All these differences mean by the time you reach retirement-age the difference between married people and single people in tems of assets and wealth is huge.

An influential study by sociologist Jesse Bernard in 1972 basically concluded that marriage is good for husbands but bad for wives. True or false?

False. Recent studies don't support her conclusions. She did no original research. Most of her results were from the mid-1960s. She reinterpreted people's results and said, "Oh, look at this." She focused only on psychological well-being. And she didn't look at changes in psychological well-being when marital status changed.

She found that married women had higher levels of psychological symptoms than single women, which studies now do not support. She mostly compared married men to married women, and women always report more psychological symptoms and distress than men do. She didn't look enough at married women compared to single women.

Is marriage as an institution declining?

USA Today does a poll every year and asks young adults what their life goals are. Having a happy marriage is the No. I goal. Young adults may be more worried about achieving this goal but they still hold it.

This is Meaghen Gonzalez, Editor of CERC. I hope you appreciated this piece. We curate these articles especially for believers like you.

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Acknowledgement

Jay Copp. "Modern Myths About Cohabitation." National Catholic Register. (April 30-May 6, 2000).

Reprinted by permission of the National Catholic Register. To subscribe to the National Catholic Register call 1-800-421-3230.

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The Author

Linda Waite is Lucy Flower Professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago. She is the author of The Case for Marriage Why Married People Are Happier, Healthier and Better off Financially.

Copyright © 2000 National Catholic Register

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