For Better or Worse: The Health Implications of Marriage Separation Due to Migration in Rural China

Author:

Chen Feinian1,Liu Hui2,Vikram Kriti1,Guo Yu1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, Maryland Population Research Center, University of Maryland, 2112 Art-Sociology Building, College Park, MD 20742, USA

2. Department of Sociology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA

Abstract

Abstract Massive rural-to-urban migration in China has led to spatial separation of millions of married couples. In this article, we examine the question of whether the well-documented health benefits of marriage extend to left-behind individuals in rural China who are spatially separated from their spouses. Using longitudinal data that span 16 years (China Health and Nutrition Survey 1991, 1993, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2006), we compare the self-reported health trajectories of adults across different marital statuses while taking into account the physical location of their spouses. Our results suggest a clear health disadvantage of married individuals whose spouses are absent compared with those whose spouses are living in the same household. Further, longer spousal absence is more harmful to an individual’s health. Finally, spousal absence and longer physical separation from their spouses induce stronger health deficits for married men than for married women, suggesting that a gendered process is at work.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference74 articles.

1. The Hukou system and rural-urban migration in China: Processes and changes;Chan;China Quarterly,1999

2. Social change and socioeconomic disparities in health over the life course in China: A cohort analysis;Chen;American Sociological Review,2010

3. Cruz, J. (2013). Divorce rate in the U.S., 2011 (NCFMR Family Profiles No. FP-13-14). Bowling Green, OH: National Center for Family and Marriage Research. Retrieved from http://www.bgsu.edu/content/dam/BGSU/college-of-arts-and-sciences/NCFMR/documents/FP/FP-13-14.pdf

4. Internal Migration in Contemporary China

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