Archives For australia

Link: Australia: What’s the real story behind increase in marriages?

It seemed like good news on marriage last year. The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported a record number of registered marriages since 1989 and a 10 per cent drop in divorce numbers since 1999. The reality is that marital relationships have never been more unstable in Australia. The number of marriages has increased because the population has grown. However, the proportion of married people has not really changed. To get a true picture of the situation concerning divorce, we need to take account of the fact more and more couples (about 1.2 million) have entered cohabiting, or de facto, relationships. The ABS refers to those in registered marriages together with those in cohabiting, or de facto, relationships as the “socially married”. We know from surveys (in the absence of official statistics) that de facto relationships break up much more frequently than formal marriages. But because these break-ups are not officially registered as divorces, the rate of break-up of the socially married is not represented in the ABS figures. If they were, the rate of separation of the socially married would be higher than the formal divorce statistics.

New Zealand: Why Marriage Matters

Report released highlighting the benefits of marriage has been released in New Zealand. The report was commissioned by Family First NZ and FamilyLife NZ in conjunction with a number of family organisations in Australia including the Australian Family Association, Family Voice Australia and Dads4Kids and is an update of the report originally released in the US in 2002. [PDF report: 21 Reasons Why Marriage Matters]

Link: Australia: Marriages at 20-year high as break-ups decline

The number of people tying the knot is at a 20-year high, while fewer of those signing up to conjugal bliss are shedding tears over a failed marriage. Last year, there were 118,756 marriages registered in Australia, almost 2500 more than the previous year and the highest number in the past two decades. In 1989, there were 117,176 marriages. The figures are contained in a snapshot of the past 20 years from the Australian Bureau of Statistics that also shows a declining divorce trend.

Link: trend: We marry later and guzzle more energy

AUSTRALIANS are putting off marriage until they are older or opting out of it altogether. About three-quarters of couples who have married since 2000 lived together beforehand, compared with a rate of only 3 per cent in the 1960s. In 1986, the most common relationship for people aged 18 to 24 was marriage, whereas now it is a de facto relationship. When we do marry, we do it later. In 2007, the average age of people marrying for the first time was 29.6 for men and 27.6 for women, up from 25.9 and 23.8 respectively in 1987. Many people find a partner for life, with 70 per cent of people over 35 having had only one live-in partnership.

Link: Australia: Loneliness is a significant problem

MARRIAGE benefits men more than women and single men are lonelier than single women, according to a survey. The Australian Unity Wellbeing Index, which covered 2,000 people and focused on the link between wellbeing and loneliness and money and debt, found that loneliness is a significant problem among Australians.
Related: Sydney, AUS – Attitudes Toward Divorce

Link: study: Attitudes towards divorce – Syndey, AUS

Marriage is for life, right? Most Australians agree with the proposition. But most also think it is perfectly all right for unhappy couples to divorce, even if they have children. // 63 percent of men and 70 percent of women thought it was “all right for a couple with an unhappy marriage to get a divorce, even if they have children”. // A higher proportion of women than men in all age groups clearly accepted divorce, and those in their 50s were more accepting of divorce than younger or older age groups. -Australian Institute of Family Studies