Why are less people getting married?

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Mikurotoro92
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01 Jan 2025, 9:00 pm

MaxE wrote:
I think the situation in Europe is different from the US. People in Europe are simply not marrying.

In the US, most people seem to desire marriage. Members of my wife's family have generally gotten married and most have had children. It's my impression that Americans in general want to get married unlike Europeans. The people who aren't getting married are probably discouraged by socioeconomic factors. In particular, if they get government benefits, it might be advantageous for them to stay single.

BTW I think Fnord raised some valid points as well.


There is a MAJOR difference between "desiring marriage" and actually "getting married" though

Most people may desire getting married but only the ones who are dedicated and patient enough to slog through the dating/courting process succeed!! !

IDK what the situation is in Europe but here in the U.S people would rather co-habitate or stay single because it is safer



Nightwing82
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01 Jan 2025, 9:16 pm

The question is backwards in a sense.

Marriage used to be more common because there was more social, religious, and political pressures to get married and stay married. Less people are getting married because it's more socially acceptable.



Mikurotoro92
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01 Jan 2025, 11:54 pm

I have some theories as to what is causing this change:

-People do not wish to have to go through the long arduous tiresome process of dating/courting just to enter a marriage that might not ultimately work out!

-Marriage and everything that comes with it is too expensive so as a result less people decide to do it

-Cohabitation is a MUCH safer choice of relationship living configuration than marriage because it offers an easy way out if things were to go south with your partner and people are starting to catch on to that

-Also people have higher priorities in their life besides finding love like their careers or they just simply aren't interested in creating and maintaining a long-term romantic relationship

The only people left who still want to get married are the ones who want the wedding & honeymoon experience

That's the main reason I'm doing it!

Do you agree with my hypothesis?



Graves Knight
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18 minutes ago

Devoted wrote:
Mikurotoro92 wrote:
What is the main root cause of the decline of marriage in the U.S?


Disclaimer: My education and training in this sphere applies only to the United States.

Sociologically speaking, marriage rates are falling because people (who are rational beings and respond to rewards/punishments) have fewer social/cultural/financial incentives to marry and stay married.

No-fault divorce laws profoundly changed the landscape of marriage in the US. It used to be difficult to marry and near-impossible to divorce, then it became easy to marry and difficult to divorce, and finally, it became very easy to marry and easy to divorce. Americans slowly transitioned from traditional monogamy (one spouse until death) to serial monogamy (one spouse at a time), and are now on track to not practice monogamy at all.

Easier access to divorce (and child support payments) results in a greater number of failed marriages. Shorter periods of courtship, premarital cohabitation, fewer children, having divorced parents themselves, marrying someone of a different religion, having severe educational differences, etc., all individually correlate (*correlation is not causation*) with an increase in divorce risk. When these factors are aggregated, successful marriage rates plummet.

Is it possible to have a successful marriage, despite having all of the above risk factors? Yes, on a micro/individual scale, it certainly is. But when we look at the macro-level data, it all points to an increase in marriage failure rates. When entire generations have witnessed astronomical marital failure, they are logically hesitant to marry. We most readily see that play out in the increase in premarital cohabitation (which, counterintuitively, social scientists have known for decades is correlated with divorce), as well as the delay of first marriages into the 30s and beyond.

All of this was established well before the advent of technology/the internet in courtship/dating (not to mention easier access to behaviors associated with marital infidelity). I suspect that single factor holds significant power in accelerating the decline of marriage, but this is pure speculation on my part; my formal studies largely concluded in the early 2000s.


Best explanation in my opinion


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Graves Knight
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12 minutes ago

Nightwing82 wrote:
The question is backwards in a sense.

Marriage used to be more common because there was more social, religious, and political pressures to get married and stay married. Less people are getting married because it's more socially acceptable.


It's like as if humanity had a commitment issue all this time.


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