Does Culture Affect Divorce? Evidence From European Immigrants in the United States

Author:

Furtado Delia1,Marcén Miriam2,Sevilla Almudena3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics, University of Connecticut, 365 Fairfield Way, Unit 1063, Storrs, CT 06269-1063, USA

2. Departamento de Análisis Económico, Facultad de Economía y Empresa, Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain

3. School of Business and Management, Queen Mary, University of London, London, UK

Abstract

Abstract This article explores the role of culture in determining divorce by examining country-of-origin differences in divorce rates of immigrants in the United States. Because childhood-arriving immigrants are all exposed to a common set of U.S. laws and institutions, we interpret relationships between their divorce tendencies and home-country divorce rates as evidence of the effect of culture. Our results are robust to controlling for several home-country variables, including average church attendance and gross domestic product (GDP). Moreover, specifications with country-of-origin fixed effects suggest that immigrants from countries with low divorce rates are especially less likely to be divorced if they reside among a large number of coethnics. Supplemental analyses indicate that divorce culture has a stronger impact on the divorce decisions of females than of males, pointing to a potentially gendered nature of divorce taboos.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

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4. An examination of cross-country differences in the gender gap in labor force participation rates;Antecol;Labour Economics,2000

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