4102.0 - Australian Social Trends, 1995
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 20/06/1995
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Family Formation: Trends in marriage and divorce
Marriage trends The crude marriage rate in Australia has fluctuated since it was first recorded in the 1860s. Broadly, the crude marriage rate has followed the pattern of prevailing economic and social conditions. It has fallen in times of depression or recession, e.g in the 1890s and 1930s, and increased in times of prosperity such as the gold rush in the 1860s and the immediate post-war years of the early 1920s and late 1940s. Marriage rates have also generally increased during times of war. The lowest recorded crude marriage rate was 6 marriages per 1,000 of the population in 1931 and the highest was 12 per 1,000 of the population in 1942. Since 1970 the crude marriage rate has declined. This is partly the result of economic downturn. In addition, rapid social change, such as changes in divorce laws and changes in attitudes to marriage and living arrangements, have had considerable effects on the marriage choices of all Australians. De facto relationships have gained greater social acceptance in the last 15 years. They may lead to people entering registered marriage later in life, as people may participate in one or more de facto relationships before marrying. However, some people will never officially marry, preferring instead to live in a de facto relationship. The ageing of the population also has an effect on crude marriage rates because of increased proportions of the population in older age groups who are already married or who are less inclined to remarry. The ageing of the population has been responsible for some of the decrease in the crude marriage rate. CRUDE MARRIAGE RATE Source: Marriage Registrations
Age at marriage In 1993, for all marriages, the median age of brides was 26 years while the median age of grooms was 29 years. For first marriages only, the median age at marriage was 25 years for women and 27 years for men. Both brides and grooms are older now than they were in the 1960s and 1970s. Factors contributing to older ages at first marriage include a later age leaving school or education, and the increased incidence of de facto relationships. The recessions in 1982-83 and 1989-90 may also have contributed since unstable employment prospects and lack of financial security may have caused couples to defer marriage. Because of the increase in divorces, there are now a larger number of divorcees than before 1976, when the Family Law Act 1975 came into effect. This has led to a larger proportion of marriages being remarriages for one or both partners. Since people who remarry are older than those who marry for the first time, this is also a contributing factor to higher median age for all marriages. Traditionally, grooms have been older than their brides. However the difference between the median ages at marriage is slowly narrowing. In 1993 the difference between the median ages of brides and grooms was 2.4 years compared to 2.7 years in 1966 and 3.1 years in the period 1921-25. For first marriages, the age difference between women and men has decreased from 2.6 years in 1966 to 2.2 years in 1993. Although both men and women are marrying at older ages than before, women in particular are delaying marriage compared to their counterparts in earlier generations. MEDIAN AGE OF BRIDES AND GROOMS Source: Marriage Registrations First marriages Like the crude marriage rate, the first marriage rate fell between 1966 and 1993. A fall occurred in all age groups for both men and women. In particular the teenage marriage rate declined significantly. In 1966 the first marriage rate for men aged 19 or less was 14.9. In 1993 this had fallen to 1.4. For women the change was even more dramatic. The rate fell between 1966 and 1993 from 61.5 to 7.4. Changing social attitudes to lone parenting and the availability of contraception and abortion have contributed to fewer teenage marriages. Other factors which generally affect first marriage rates include the increasing acceptance of de facto partnering, increased higher education opportunities for men and women, increased work and career opportunities for women, and decreases in housing affordability. AGE-SPECIFIC FIRST MARRIAGE RATES
Source: Marriage Registrations Divorce trends Not all family dissolutions are registered as divorces. Some married couples separate but never divorce. As de facto relationships are unregistered, their breakdown is also unregistered. Consequently the extent of family dissolution is not easily measured but can be expected to be higher than divorce rates show. In 1991 the Australian Institute of Family Studies found that over a thirty year period, 40% of all marriages end in divorce1. The trend in divorce in Australia changed with the introduction of the Family Law Act 1975 which came into operation on 5 January 1976. It allowed only one ground for divorce, an irretrievable breakdown in the marriage, measured as the separation of the spouses for at least one year. This legal change resulted in a large increase in the crude divorce rate in 1976. The rate then declined until 1979 as the backlog of applications was cleared. Subsequently the rate has fluctuated with a slight increase evident since 1987. The divorce rate was consistently higher in the 1980s and early 1990s than at any time before 1975. CRUDE DIVORCE RATE Source: Divorce Registrations Duration of marriages ending in divorce In 1993 the median duration of marriages which ended in divorce was 10.7 years. This was higher than at any time since 1977. Despite divorce being possible after one year's separation, the median duration of marriage to separation in the late 1980s and early 1990s has been about 7 years (see Family - National summary tables), indicating a delay of about 3 years between separation and the completion of divorce proceedings. Of marriages which ended in divorce, first marriages tend to have lasted longer than subsequent marriages. For women and men who divorced from their first marriage in 1993, the median duration of their marriage was around 12 years. In comparison divorces of those who had been married more than once occurred a median of around 8 years after their marriage. MEDIAN DURATION OF MARRIAGE TO DIVORCE Source: Divorce Registrations Children in divorce The proportion of divorces involving children decreased steadily between 1983 and 1993, from 62% to 53% (see Family - National summary tables). In 1993, 10 of every 1,000 children in Australia were involved in a divorce, a slight reduction from the 1983 figure of 12. These changes, coupled with the increase in the median age of mother at birth of first child in marriage (see Family - National summary tables), suggests that divorce is becoming more likely to occur before children are born. CHILDREN(a) AND DIVORCE
(a) Unmarried children of the marriage who were aged under 18 years at the time of the application for divorce. (b) Rate per 1,000 children aged under 18 years. Source: Divorce Registrations Remarriage Immediately following the introduction of the Family Law Act 1975, remarriage rates increased in every age group but remarriage rates in the 1980s and 1990s declined from the highs of the late 1970s. In the 1980s remarriages accounted for around one-third of all marriages. Men are more likely to remarry than women although the gap has narrowed. In 1966 widowed or divorced men were three times as likely as widowed or divorced women to remarry. In 1993 they were twice as likely. In 1993, 68 of every 1,000 divorced men, and 52 of every 1,000 divorced women, remarried. Similarly, 16 of every 1,000 widowed men remarried compared to 4 of every 1,000 widowed women. This reflects the ageing of the population, the longer life expectancy of women than men and the tendency for men to marry someone younger than themselves. In 1994, 84% of widowed people were aged 60 or more and one-third of these were aged 80 or more. Women 80 years or more outnumbered men 80 years or more by about 2 to 1. Women tend to wait longer than men to remarry. In 1993 the median interval to remarriage for widowed women was 5.7 years compared to 4.0 years for men. Among divorced people the median intervals were 3.2 years for women and 2.8 years for men. These intervals have changed little in recent years. The decline in the remarriage rate also reflects the increased likelihood of de facto relationships either as an alternative to remarriage or before remarriage. In 1992, 52% of people who were currently married after a previous divorce, had lived in a de facto relationship before the current marriage. This compares to 32% of people who married for the first time2. Previously divorced people, on average, also spent a longer period in de facto relationships than those who were in their first marriage. Of people who were in de facto relationships prior to their current marriage, 21% of those previously divorced spent less than 1 year living together compared to 30% of first time marrieds. De facto relationships of more than 5 years duration accounted for 8% of first marrieds who lived in such a relationship, compared to 16% of previously divorced persons. MARITAL STATUS SPECIFIC REMARRIAGE RATES(a)
(a) Rate of remarriage per 1,000 of the marital status specific population. Source: Marriage Registrations; Census of Population and Housing; Estimated Resident Population Endnotes 1 Australian Institute of Family Studies (1993), 'Divorce Trends' in Family Matters Issue no. 35. 2 Focus on Families: Demographics and Family Formation (cat. no. 4420.0).
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