data out today from the National Center for Health Statistics

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Jullianna

Guest
#1
By Sharon Jayson, USA TODAY

Nearly 40% of women have never been married, and fewer are in a first marriage, according to a new government report that takes a detailed look at first marriages and their chances for survival.
The data, out today from the National Center for Health Statistics, are based on 22,682 in-person interviews from 2006 to 2010 with men and women (not couples) ages 15 to 44. Among the 12,279 women studied, the percentage of never-marrieds rose to 38% from 33% in 1995.
The highest percentage of women who have never married was among blacks (55%), followed by U.S.-born Hispanics (49%), Asians (39%) and whites (34%).
The percentage of women who said they were in a first marriage declined to 36%, from 44% in 1982. Similar data on men were not collected until 2002.
The data reflect not only the "delay in getting married for the first time" but also "that more people are cohabitating," says Galena Rhoades of the University of Denver's Center for Marital and Family Studies.
Researchers consider the numbers reliable: "Of all the government reports, this series has the best methodology about marriage and divorce," says sociologist Andrew Cherlin, a demographer at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
The data show that nearly one in two marriages break up within 20 years; 1995 data found that 50% of all women's first marriages survived. The new data show that 52% of women's first marriages survived the 20-year mark. Among men, 56% of marriages did.
The study has been conducted since 1973 among women ages 15 to 44. Men were added later. With 44 as the age limit, 20 years is the longest marriage duration that can be analyzed, says Casey Copen, the report's lead author.
A number of factors affect the likelihood of divorce, experts say, including education. For women with at least a bachelor's degree, for example, 78% were still married after 20 years, compared with 49% for those with some college and 41% for high school graduates.
For men, 65% of those with at least a bachelor's degree were still married after 20 years, compared with 54% for those with some college and 47% for high school graduates.

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A story on NBC news this evening reported that asian women and hispanic men were among those least likely to divorce. The report also indicated that a marriage was more likely to last if it was a first marriage and neither party had children prior to the marriage.
 

Oncefallen

Idiot in Chief
Staff member
Jan 15, 2011
6,032
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#2
Sad statistics. It is understandable that asians and hispanics have lower divorce rates, it is more culturally taboo. From what I've heard, statistics on divorce among second and third marriages skyrocket (when the first marriage ended in divorce). Kinda kills the "I just married the wrong person" excuse.
 
Aug 2, 2009
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#3
This proves that statisticians are absolutely horrible writers.
 
J

Jullianna

Guest
#4
hahahahahahaha! :D
 
Aug 2, 2009
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#5
I actually did read and assimilate all that though. :) There are actually two sets of statistics...1) how many women never marry, and 2) how many married women stay married after 20 years. I think maybe they are trying to confuse the reader. :p
 
J

Jullianna

Guest
#6
I think they were just trying to look at it from different perspectives.
 

AAAPlus

Senior Member
Aug 2, 2011
601
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#7
So basically...get a bachelor's degree
 
Aug 2, 2009
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#8
But it could also be age-related. I don't know why they started the age of the survey at 15 (???!!!). The ones who have only high-school or some college might have STILL BEEN in high school or college.

This survey would have been more useful if they only surveyed women 30 and older.
 
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Jullianna

Guest
#9
Hmm...maybe the age thing is because there are a lot of women still living and married who actually married that early. It was pretty common back in the day.
 
Aug 2, 2009
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#10
Oh never mind. I read it wrong. What its saying is that out of those women whose marriages have lasted more than 20 years, 78% had a bachelor's degree.




Anyway, I found another article on the same data and its a bit easier to read and understand:

Half of First Marriages Don't Last 20 Years