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24 Child & Fam. L. Q. 176 (2012)
Cohabitation, Marriage and Child Outcomes: An Empirical Analysis of the Relationship between Marital Status and Child Outcomes in the UK Using the Millennium Cohort Study

handle is hein.journals/chilflq24 and id is 180 raw text is: 176

Cohabitation, marriage and child
outcomes: an empirical analysis of
the relationship between marital
status and child outcomes in the
UK using the Millennium Cohort
Study
Claire Crawford, Alissa Goodman, Ellen Greaves and
Rob Joyce*
The proportion of children born to unmarried parents has risen dramatically over the
past three decades; in 2010 just over three in ten of all live births in England and
Wales were born to cohabiting couples. This significant change raises a number of
important questions that cut across government policy areas and academic disciplines,
perhaps the most fundamental of which is whether being born to cohabiting rather
than married parents matters for children's well-being. In this article we assess
whether there are differences in early measures of cognitive and socio-emotional
development between children born to cohabiting and married couples, and if so,
whether marriage is the cause of these differences. We show that children born to
married parents exhibit higher cognitive and socio-emotional development at ages 3
and 5, on average, than children born to cohabiting couples. We then adopt a
systematic empirical approach to try to identify whether marriage is the cause of these
differences, or whether they are in fact accounted for by other characteristics of the
parents which happen to be correlated with marital status. As this empirical strategy
involves some judgment on our part, we cannot claim a definitive answer We do,
howeve, regard our results as a strong indication that marriage plays a relatively small
role, if any in promoting children's early cognitive or socio-emotional development.
SECTION A: INTRODUCTION
T here has been a dramatic increase in the number of births outside marriage over
the last three decades, particularly to cohabiting couples. According to official birth
registry statistics, nearly half of all live births in England and Wales occurred outside
marriage in 2010, a rate that has been steadily increasing, from less than one in ten in
the late 1970s. Of these, it is estimated that the majority - amounting to just over 30%
of all live births - are to cohabiting couples. Meanwhile, the proportion born to lone
parents has risen only slightly since official records began to distinguish between types
Claire Crawford, Programme Director; Alissa Goodman, Deputy Director; Ellen Greaves, Research
Economist and Rob Joyce, Research Economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies.
The authors are very grateful to Dan Anderberg, John Ermisch, Hayley Fisher, Rory Gallagher, Kathleen
Kiernan, Penny Mansfield, Jo Miles, Debora Price, Rebecca Probert, Kitty Stewart and Sharon
Witherspoon for helpful comments and advice. Responsibility for interpretation of the data, as well as for
any errors, is the authors' alone.

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