Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Relationships and Sexual Health Divorce

Study finds raising the minimum wage delays marriages and significantly reduces divorce rates

by Eric W. Dolan
April 20, 2022
in Divorce, Social Psychology
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Follow PsyPost on Google News

New research provides evidence that states that raised their minimum wages delayed marriages and reduced divorce rates among low-wage earners. The study, published in the Journal of Marriage and Family, was the first to systematically examine the impact of minimum wages increases on marriage stability in the United States.

“I have been studying marriage and divorce for 30 years, and have spent most of that time studying lower-income couples in their first years of marriage. Throughout that time, I have closely followed the efforts of the federal government to promote stronger marriages in lower-income populations,” said study author Benjamin Karney, a professor and the co-director of the UCLA Marriage and Close Relationships Lab.

“To date, those efforts have focused exclusively on relationship education, an approach that assumes that the difficulties of poorer couples stem from not knowing how to communicate effectively. That did not match what my own research on lower-income couples was telling me. In our studies, the main obstacle to a happy marriage for poor couples was the stress of being poor. This got my colleagues and me wondering: would policies that reduce income inequality affect marriage and divorce, even though they do not target relationships directly? Our new paper addresses that question.”

For their study, the researchers analyzed data collected by the Current Population Survey, which includes 60,000 households, and the American Community Survey, which includes 300,000 households. The data were collected from 2004 through 2015, and analysis the focused on individuals aged 18 to 35, who comprise the majority of minimum wage earners.

Despite concerns about the potential for minimum wage increases to result in disemployment, the researchers found that minimum wage increases had significant positive effects on earnings and no effect on hours worked. Increases in the minimum wage were also associated with reduced rates of both marriage and divorce among low-wage households. Karney and his colleagues found that a $1 per hour increase in the state minimum wage corresponded to an 3%–6% decline in marriage rates and a 7%–15% decline in divorce rates at 1- and 2-year time lags.

“Policies that make life easier for couples that are struggling financially can have powerful effects on marriage and divorce without ever teaching anyone anything,” Karney told PsyPost. “The implication of this work is that policy-makers who care about the health and stability of working families should be invested in programs that improve their quality of life, regardless of whether those programs directly target how couples communicate. When given adequate resources, couples can figure out how to communicate without any help from relationship educators.”

Karney and his colleagues were able to conduct a quasi-experimental study “by exploiting similarities between states in the US that did or did not change their minimum wage,” providing evidence of causality rather than just correlational relationships. But the study, like all research, includes some caveats.

“Although the analyses reported in this paper demonstrate clearly that raising the minimum wage leads to reductions in early marriage and divorce, the available data were not able to address the mechanism of this effect,” Karney said. “It is for future research to examine whether raising the minimum wage affected decisions about marriage and divorce by reducing financial stress, increasing couples’ confidence in the future, raising partners’ esteem for one another, or something else.”

The researchers noted that the findings are consistent with the effects of the Minnesota Family Investment Program, a federal-state program that provides income assistance to low-wage households, which has been found to reduce divorce rates by up to 25%.

“It is easy for policy makers and those who work with couples to assume that the fate of a relationship is in partners’ hands, and this is the assumption that directs attention toward educational interventions,” Karney said. “This work supports an alternative perspective: the way that two people relate to each other in their most intimate moments is profoundly affected by circumstances outside the couple and outside of their control.”

The study, “State minimum wage increases delay marriage and reduce divorce among low-wage households“, was authored by Benjamin R. Karney, Jeffrey B. Wenger, Melanie A. Zaber, and Thomas N. Bradbury.

TweetSendScanShareSendPin4ShareShareShareShareShare

RELATED

New psychology study sheds light on mysterious “feelings of presence” during isolation
Political Psychology

People who think “everyone agrees with me” are more likely to support populism

July 1, 2025

People who wrongly believe that most others share their political views are more likely to support populist ideas, according to a new study. These false beliefs can erode trust in democratic institutions and fuel resentment toward political elites.

Read moreDetails
Researchers identify neural mechanism behind memory prioritization
Social Psychology

People who are more likely to die seem to care less about the future

June 30, 2025

Individuals with higher mortality risk—as judged by actuarial life insurance data—tend to care less about long-term consequences. They show more impulsivity and less future planning, consistent with evolutionary theories that link time horizon to environmental and internal health cues.

Read moreDetails
Scientists show how you’re unknowingly sealing yourself in an information bubble
Cognitive Science

Scientists show how you’re unknowingly sealing yourself in an information bubble

June 29, 2025

Scientists have found that belief polarization doesn’t always come from misinformation or social media bubbles. Instead, it often begins with a simple search. Our choice of words—and the algorithm’s response—can subtly seal us inside our own informational comfort zones.

Read moreDetails
Radical leaders inspire stronger devotion because they make followers feel significant, study finds
Political Psychology

Radical leaders inspire stronger devotion because they make followers feel significant, study finds

June 28, 2025

A new study finds that voters are more motivated by radical political leaders than moderates, because supporting bold causes makes them feel personally significant—driving greater activism, sacrifice, and long-term engagement across elections in the United States and Poland.

Read moreDetails
Openness to sugar relationships tied to short-term mating, not life history strategy
Evolutionary Psychology

Openness to sugar relationships tied to short-term mating, not life history strategy

June 28, 2025

Sugar relationships may be more about sexual attitudes than survival strategies. A new study shows people drawn to these arrangements tend to favor short-term mating, while early-life unpredictability plays only a small role—especially for men.

Read moreDetails
New psychology research uncovers surprisingly consistent misjudgments of tattooed individuals
Social Psychology

New psychology research uncovers surprisingly consistent misjudgments of tattooed individuals

June 28, 2025

New research finds that while people often agree on what a tattoo says about someone’s personality, those judgments are usually wrong. The study reveals a consistent gap between how tattoos are perceived and the actual personalities of their wearers.

Read moreDetails
Sexual satisfaction’s link to marital happiness grows stronger with age
Relationships and Sexual Health

Similarity in long‑term romantic couples probably matters less than we think

June 27, 2025

Despite common belief that couples must be alike, a review of 339 studies finds little evidence that actual similarity predicts lasting relationship satisfaction.

Read moreDetails
TikTok tics study sheds light on recovery trends and ongoing mental health challenges
Body Image and Body Dysmorphia

TikTok and similar platforms linked to body dissatisfaction and eating disorder symptoms

June 27, 2025

Frequent use of platforms like TikTok and YouTube Shorts is linked to disordered eating symptoms among teens, according to new research. The study found that body comparisons and dissatisfaction may help explain this troubling association—especially among girls.

Read moreDetails

SUBSCRIBE

Go Ad-Free! Click here to subscribe to PsyPost and support independent science journalism!

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

Could creatine slow cognitive decline? Mouse study reveals promising effects on brain aging

ChatGPT and “cognitive debt”: New study suggests AI might be hurting your brain’s ability to think

Frequent dreams and nightmares surged worldwide during the COVID-19 pandemic

Vagus nerve signals influence food intake more in higher socio-economic groups

People who think “everyone agrees with me” are more likely to support populism

What is the most attractive body fat percentage for men? New research offers an answer

Longer antidepressant use linked to more severe, long-lasting withdrawal symptoms, study finds

New psychology study sheds light on mysterious “feelings of presence” during isolation

         
       
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and Conditions
[Do not sell my information]

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy