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Previously on "Photographer: Getty Images Don’t Blame Divorce on Money. Ask: Did the Husband Have a"
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The divorce laws changed in 1969. Radically. Before that it was heavily weighted in favour of the man.
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Photographer: Getty Images Don’t Blame Divorce on Money. Ask: Did the Husband Have a
Don’t Blame Divorce on Money. Ask: Did the Husband Have a Job? - Bloomberg
A Harvard University study suggests that neither financial strains nor women's increased ability to get out of an unhappy marriage, starting in the 1970s, is typically the main reason for a split.
The big factor, Harvard sociology professor Alexandra Killewald found, is the husband's employment status. For the past four decades, she discovered, husbands who aren’t employed full time have a 3.3 percent chance of getting divorced in any given year, compared with 2.5 percent for husbands employed full time. In other words, their marriages are one-third more likely to break up.Last edited by vetran; 28 July 2016, 10:11.Tags: None
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