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What
Really is the Divorce Rate?
Scott M.
Stanley, Ph.D.
University of Denver
1.
First, about myths. In recent years, some
have suggested that the “real” divorce rate is nothing near
50% but that it is more like 15%--meaning, 15% of couples who
marry will divorce. I do not well understand where the 15%
number comes from, but the arguments in it’s favor are usually
supported by a serious misunderstanding of where the 40-50%
numbers come from. The assumption has been (by those who have
not studied it carefully) is that the 50% number came from
someone noticing that, in the U.S., we have about 2.4 million
marriages a year and 1.2 million divorces a year.
Hence, 50% of married couples divorce. Having set
forth this explanation, people arguing for the lower percent
as being the real divorce rate, go forth with their case.
No serious
demographer ever looked at the approx 2.4 mil marriages a year
and 1.2 mil divorces a year to arrive at the 50% number.
That is a misunderstanding that began early in the
debate about what the divorce rate really is—a
misunderstanding that is, unfortunately, widely
perpetuated. The 40-50% number comes from
detailed analyses of various population demographics,
including ages, divorce rates by ages, lifespan projections,
etc. It represents a sophisticated projection—much like the
projected life span projections for babies being born
today. As with any projection, the number could change if
conditions in society change, but it is a very valid projection
under current conditions. As recently as 1992, the U.S. Bureau of Census completed a
sophisticated analysis and concluded:
A. . . if one
assumes a continuation of recent divorce trends, about 4 out
of 10 first marriages to the youngest cohort may eventually
end in divorce. Alternatively, if one assumes a return to the pattern
of divorce during the 1975 to 1980 period, 5 out of 10 first
marriages may eventually end in divorce (Current Population
Reports, P23-180, 1992, p. 5),
Some have suggested that
demographer failed to take into account the marriages already
in existence, many of which have a very low likelihood of
divorcing. That's
simply not true.
2.
So, the 40-50% number is a projection for younger folks
marrying for the first time. However, conditions
in society could change to affect this either way. In
fact, Andrew Cherlin, one of the prominent scientists in this
area, believes that these kinds of projections are very valid,
but also suggests that it is particularly hard to confidently
predict the future in times of great social
change. We live
in such times.
3.
So, what is the divorce rate?
Consider the following statements:
Approximately 31% of your friends, aged
35 to 54, who are married, engaged, or cohabitating have
already been previously divorced.
If your parents have been married many
years (let's say 35+ years) and have never been divorced, the
likelihood of their marriage ending in divorce is nil.
The rate of divorces per year per 1000
people in the U.S. has been declining since 1981.
A young couple marrying for the first
time today has a lifetime divorce risk of 40%, unless current
trends change significantly.
Each of these
statements is true and defensible. They each tell you
something different about divorce. On the positive side,
the rate has been slowing declining. On the negative
side, a young couple really does have a very high chance of
not making it--and those that say otherwise do not understand
the data. I think the way people commonly understand the
divorce rate is actually quite close to the truth--that
marriages starting out today are at great risk for divorce or
marital distress.
4.
Some have implied that the real divorce rate is closer
to 15% to 25%. But that has to be a serious underestimate because it is the
percentage of adults already divorced, and includes so many
people with many years to live who simply have not gotten
divorced yet. The
25% can only go higher for some time, unless one believes
that young people are going to divorce at lower rates than
their grandparents.
No scientist in this field that I know of believes
that will happen.
So, the truth is
that couples marrying today are at very high risk for
divorce. While it is true that most couples in the older
generation will never divorce, 40-50% in the younger
generation probably will--unless we do much more as a society
to help prevent this.
William Mattox,
of the USA Today, has raised excellent concerns about the ways
such numbers can be misunderstood. Do couples really
understand that the 40-50% number is only a projection that is
not written in stone? Does this projection leave couples
demoralized, feeling that most couples are doomed to fail
anyway? Or does it give rise to motivation to take
marriage more seriously? We
really do not know the answer to this question.
My point boils down to this: the projection is valid,
not some casually made up number.
But Mattox's
point is also valid: couples need to know that they do not
have to live out the prevailing societal trends.
There's nothing wrong with the 40-50% projection,
it's just that we don't necessarily have to stand by and
let it come to pass.
Scott M. Stanley, Ph.D.
University of Denver
Author of The Heart of Commitment
Copyright © 2003 by PREP, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of the
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