Cohabiting and marriage during young men’s career-development process
Author(s) -
Valerie Kincade Oppenheimer
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
demography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.099
H-Index - 129
eISSN - 1533-7790
pISSN - 0070-3370
DOI - 10.1353/dem.2003.0006
Subject(s) - cohabitation , earnings , socioeconomic status , demography , odds , national longitudinal surveys , demographic economics , national survey of family growth , marital status , survey data collection , psychology , population , economics , sociology , geography , family planning , medicine , research methodology , logistic regression , statistics , mathematics , accounting , archaeology
Using recently released cohabitation data for the male sample of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, first interviewed in 1979, I conducted multinomial discrete-time event-history analyses of how young men’s career-development process affects both the formation and the dissolution of cohabiting unions. For a substantial proportion of young men, cohabitation seemed to represent an adaptive strategy during a period of career immaturity, whereas marriage was a far more likely outcome for both stably employed cohabitors and noncohabitors alike. Earnings positively affected the entry into either a cohabiting or marital union but exhibited a strong threshold effect. Once the men were in cohabiting unions, however, earnings had little effect on the odds of marrying. Men with better long-run socioeconomic prospects were far more likely to marry from either the noncohabiting or cohabiting state, and this was particularly true for blacks.
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