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Gender Differences in the Consequences of Divorce: A Multiple-Outcome Comparison of Former Spouses

SOEPpapers 841, o.S.

Thomas Leopold

2016

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Abstract

This study examined gender differences in the consequences of divorce for multiple measures of psychological, economic, and domestic well-being. I used household panel data from the German SOEP, retaining the link between initially married couples (N = 755) to compare both spouses over a period of up to four years before and after divorce. Findings showed that men were more vulnerable to short-term declines in subjective measures of well-being, whereas women experienced longer-term disadvantages in objective economic status. Taken together, these results suggest that women’s disproportionate income strain is chronic, whereas men’s disproportionate psychological and domestic strain is not.


Frei zugängliche Version: (econstor)
http://hdl.handle.net/10419/142749

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