Abstract
Over the last 20 years the academic community has experienced a burgeoning interest in the causes and correlates of subjective well-being. One of the most consistent findings has been that married respondents report higher levels of happiness and life satisfaction than unmarried respondents. Despite its prevalence, scant empirical research has focused on the potential mechanisms driving this relationship. The current work draws on the Behavior Risk Factor Surveillance System along with 2000 US Census data to investigate the role of context and reference groups in shaping the relationship between marriage and well-being. The primary research question is whether marriage has a greater influence on life satisfaction when it is more common and thus more normative? The findings offer new insight into the marriage/well-being relationship and have broad implication for how we think about the study of the causes and correlates of subjective well-being.
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Notes
As the size of the reference group may also be influential, I reran all of the models separately for small, medium, and large, as well as urban and rural counties. There were no substantive differences in the findings across the different sized or type of counties.
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Wadsworth, T. Marriage and Subjective Well-Being: How and Why Context Matters. Soc Indic Res 126, 1025–1048 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-015-0930-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-015-0930-9