Publication | Closed Access
Sex Differences in the Entry Into Marriage
305
Citations
24
References
1986
Year
Family FormationSocial SciencesMarriage Market FactorsGender IdentityIntimate RelationshipGender StudiesSex DifferencesPublic HealthSexual And Reproductive HealthEarly MarriageDemographic ChangeNational Longitudinal SurveysSex DifferenceSexual BehaviorMarriage MarketsMarriageMarital SexSociologyDemographyMarriage RateSexual Orientation
Among the many transitions young people make as they enter adult-hood, marriage is perhaps the most important. This paper uses data from the National Longitudinal Surveys of Young Women and Young Men to examine the transition to marriage and how it differs by sex, testing the extent of variation in the desirability of marriage for men and women, and the effects of marriage market factors and marital and nonmarital roles. The design of the analysis allows the effects of these factors to vary over the young adult years. The pattern of findings suggests that recent declines in the marriage rate have not resulted from increased barriers to marriage but from declines in relative preferences for marriage.
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