The Post

How an unravelling economy could affect couples

BRIENNA PERELLI-HARRIS AND NIELS BLOM Perelli-Harris is a professor of demography, University of Southampton. Blom is a research fellow, University of Southampton. This is an edited version of an article that initially appeared on The Conversation.

SOCIAL distancing and lockdown have meant that many couples are now spending too much time with each other – and not enough time apart.

As couples struggle to provide and care for children, the basic rhythm of everyday life has been turned upside down – conditions which have undoubtedly put couples under enormous strain.

But relationships are not only being challenged by new social arrangements. They are also under pressure from immense economic uncertainty.

Increases in unemployment will have severe consequences.

Our research showed that even under normal circumstances, unemployment is associated with lower relationship happiness.

We studied British heterosexual couples over a period of eight years and found that those experiencing unemployment, or whose partner is unemployed, tend to be significantly less happy with the relationship.

These problems become worse the longer they are out of work. It is not just the immediate impact of losing a job, but also the long-term economic and psychological hardship that couples face. The current economic crisis will have far-reaching implications for millions of couples.

Women especially are less happy with their relationship when their partner is unemployed. But the opposite is not true: women’s unemployment does not seem to affect men’s relationship happiness.

Women were also less happy with their relationship when their partner experienced unemployment in the past two years even if the partner had returned to work. This indicates that men’s unemployment can have a longterm effect, even “scarring” the female partner’s opinion of the relationship.

Although attitudes have changed in recent decades, many people continue to think that it is a man’s responsibility to be the main provider.

At the same time, women, particularly mothers, are often expected to stay at home or work part time. This traditional pattern may explain why men’s unemployment affects how happy women are in relationships but not vice versa.

Unmarried most vulnerable

Economic problems are more common among couples who live together without being married. The least educated are more likely to have a child while cohabiting and are more likely to separate.

Unmarried couples living together also have worse health and mental well-being. Overall, cohabiting couples tend to be disadvantaged compared to couples who are married.

Our report indicated that cohabiting partnerships have also become less stable. Although the majority of couples start living together without being married, more and more couples are using cohabitation as a testing ground and then split up if the relationship doesn’t work out.

As our report stated, in previous decades, more than half of cohabiting couples would have married within five years.

Today, only about a third marry, a third separate, and another third stay within cohabitation. Within 10 years of moving in together, about 40% of cohabiting couples separate.

Even when couples have children, unmarried couples have a higher chance of breaking up than married ones.

Among all separating couples (both married and cohabiting), the proportion who weren’t married increased dramatically. In fact, the vast majority of break-ups involving children in recent years have occurred among cohabitees instead of married couples. This is partly caused by the greater economic problems among the unmarried.

Toll

Taken together, less stable partnerships and deepening economic uncertainty will result in a surge in vulnerable relationships.

As the coronavirus crisis puts more families under strain, government policies need to recognise the impact of unemployment on couples’ relationships. And although the government is racing to provide financial assistance to struggling families, they should eventually put in place measures to socially support couples.

For instance, they could provide additional support to cohabiting couples who may not have the same access to resources when separating, and funding could be directed to counselling programmes that target the unemployed and their spouses.

Such assistance may help to alleviate some of the profound social consequences of the coronavirus pandemic.

DIVORCE

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2021-05-12T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-05-12T07:00:00.0000000Z

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