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Revisiting the relationship between marriage and wellbeing : does marriage quality matter?

Version 2 2024-06-13, 16:50
Version 1 2015-03-24, 10:28
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 16:50 authored by BC Chapman, CG Guven
This paper revisits the marriage and wellbeing relationship using variables reflecting marriage quality and data from the US, the UK and Germany. People in self-assessed poor marriages are fairly miserable and much less happy than unmarried people, even in the first year of marriages. However, people in self-assessed good marriages are even happier than the literature suggests. Women show greater range of responses to marriage quality than men. The effect of employment status and subjective health on happiness and the marriage effects on interpersonal trust and mental health change dramatically when marriage quality is controlled for. A strong link from happiness to marriage does not exist. However, happier people are more likely to stay single instead of being unhappily married, but less likely to stay single compared to being very happily married and happiness cannot predict staying single versus being pretty happily married.

History

Journal

Journal of happiness studies

Volume

17

Season

Latest Articles

Pagination

533-551

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

1389-4978

eISSN

1573-7780

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2014, Springer

Issue

2

Publisher

Springer

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