Marriage dissolution among American men, 2003–2010: The roles of measured earnings and latent selection

Research in the economics of the family has established that economic incentives play a significant role in the process of marriage formation and dissolution. This paper distinguishes between two aspects of husbands’ earnings in the process of divorce. On one hand, measured earnings might exert a di...

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Main Authors: Robert Nakosteen, Michael Zimmer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Cogent Economics & Finance
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2017.1348327
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spelling doaj-46bc232ea73c425abebc15cb3fd46c992021-02-18T13:53:23ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Economics & Finance2332-20392017-01-015110.1080/23322039.2017.13483271348327Marriage dissolution among American men, 2003–2010: The roles of measured earnings and latent selectionRobert Nakosteen0Michael Zimmer1University of MassachusettsUniversity of EvansvilleResearch in the economics of the family has established that economic incentives play a significant role in the process of marriage formation and dissolution. This paper distinguishes between two aspects of husbands’ earnings in the process of divorce. On one hand, measured earnings might exert a direct effect on the stability of marriage. On the other hand, some husbands possess unobserved traits that might simultaneously affect their earnings growth and their propensities to terminate their marriages. This research utilizes data from the United States Current Population Survey for years 2003 through 2010, and is based on samples of initially married men at two points in time. We seek first to examine whether marriage dissolution occurs in the presence of correlation between unobserved factors present in both earnings during the first period and the subsequent decision to divorce. Second, we look for an explicit role of earnings per se in the divorce decision. Results of the study provide support for significant effects in both dimensions. Increases in observed earnings result a tendency to stabilize marriages. Controlling for observed earnings, however, there is evidence that men with strong unmeasured earnings attributes possess latent propensities to dissolve their marriages.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2017.1348327marriage dissolutionimpact of earnings and latent earnings potential on divorce
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Nakosteen
Michael Zimmer
spellingShingle Robert Nakosteen
Michael Zimmer
Marriage dissolution among American men, 2003–2010: The roles of measured earnings and latent selection
Cogent Economics & Finance
marriage dissolution
impact of earnings and latent earnings potential on divorce
author_facet Robert Nakosteen
Michael Zimmer
author_sort Robert Nakosteen
title Marriage dissolution among American men, 2003–2010: The roles of measured earnings and latent selection
title_short Marriage dissolution among American men, 2003–2010: The roles of measured earnings and latent selection
title_full Marriage dissolution among American men, 2003–2010: The roles of measured earnings and latent selection
title_fullStr Marriage dissolution among American men, 2003–2010: The roles of measured earnings and latent selection
title_full_unstemmed Marriage dissolution among American men, 2003–2010: The roles of measured earnings and latent selection
title_sort marriage dissolution among american men, 2003–2010: the roles of measured earnings and latent selection
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Economics & Finance
issn 2332-2039
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Research in the economics of the family has established that economic incentives play a significant role in the process of marriage formation and dissolution. This paper distinguishes between two aspects of husbands’ earnings in the process of divorce. On one hand, measured earnings might exert a direct effect on the stability of marriage. On the other hand, some husbands possess unobserved traits that might simultaneously affect their earnings growth and their propensities to terminate their marriages. This research utilizes data from the United States Current Population Survey for years 2003 through 2010, and is based on samples of initially married men at two points in time. We seek first to examine whether marriage dissolution occurs in the presence of correlation between unobserved factors present in both earnings during the first period and the subsequent decision to divorce. Second, we look for an explicit role of earnings per se in the divorce decision. Results of the study provide support for significant effects in both dimensions. Increases in observed earnings result a tendency to stabilize marriages. Controlling for observed earnings, however, there is evidence that men with strong unmeasured earnings attributes possess latent propensities to dissolve their marriages.
topic marriage dissolution
impact of earnings and latent earnings potential on divorce
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2017.1348327
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