Have Teens’ Cohabitation, Marriage, and Childbearing Goals Changed Since the Great Recession?
Eric E. Sevareid,
Katherine Graham,
Karen Benjamin Guzzo (),
Wendy D. Manning and
Susan L. Brown
Additional contact information
Eric E. Sevareid: Bowling Green State University
Katherine Graham: Bowling Green State University
Karen Benjamin Guzzo: The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Wendy D. Manning: Bowling Green State University
Susan L. Brown: Bowling Green State University
Population Research and Policy Review, 2023, vol. 42, issue 6, No 4, 29 pages
Abstract:
Abstract The uneven recovery of the post-Great Recession years has been accompanied by changing family behaviors throughout the U.S. For teens, whose family building years are largely still to come, these broader shifts may have influenced their expectations of cohabitation, marriage, or childbearing in the future. Further, given variation in gender socialization, teen girls and boys may think differently about their future family behaviors. In this project, we analyzed cohabitation, marriage, and childbearing expectations and intentions among teens ages 15–19 by gender using National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) data, representing the years 2012–2018. Since the Great Recession, the vast majority of teens continued to expect to marry and intend to have children, with less certainty but growth nonetheless in cohabitation expectations. By 2018, gender differentials in cohabitation expectations persisted, gender differences in fertility intentions disappeared, and there were no gender differences in marital intentions. In general, we found little evidence of a weakening of teens’ expectations and intentions to engage in family formation behaviors in the years since the Great Recession, though it remains to be seen whether teens will actually cohabit, marry, or have children as they move through the life course.
Keywords: Teen expectations; Cohabitation; Marriage; Childbearing; Family formation; Attitudes (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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DOI: 10.1007/s11113-023-09833-8
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