Childless couples have
happier marriages,
says a new
study.
Researchers at the Open University in the United
Kingdom interviewed and surveyed over 5,000 people and found that men and women
without children
are more satisfied with their relationships; they are
also more likely to feel valued by their partner. The participants included
people of all ages, statuses, and sexual orientation.
“Saying ‘thank you’ and giving compliments emerged
as one of the most important factor in keeping a relationship healthy across
all groups,” the researchers noted in the study.
Researchers also found that women without children
were the least happy with life overall, however they did find that mothers
were happier than any other group.
The researchers were also able to determine that
people who had been in a long-term relationship before were more likely to know
how to sustain their next one.
“This is a shift away from the idea that they are
just failed relationships to be put in a cupboard and forgotten about,” Dr.
Jacqui Gabb, a senior lecturer in social policy at the Open University and lead
author on the study told the Daily Telegraph. “It shows they have learnt something
through them, therefore it can be an enriching experience.”
The one big difference researchers found between men
and women were that mothers more twice as likely to say their children are the
most important person in their lives while fathers said it was their partner.
And, while this data is from the UK, what might happen in the US with this trend?
The nation’s racial and ethnic minority
groups—especially Hispanics—are growing more rapidly than the non-Hispanic
white population, fueled by both immigration and births. This trend has been
taking place for decades, and one result is the Census Bureau’s announcement
today that non-Hispanic
whites now account for a minority of births in the U.S. for the first time.
Hispanics are more than a quarter of the nation’s
youngest residents, according to the new population estimates, accounting for
26.3% of the population younger than age 1. Among other major non-Hispanic
groups, the share for whites is 49.6%; for blacks, 13.7%; and for Asians 4.4%.
The long-term result of these changes among younger
age groups is that non-Hispanic whites are projected to become a minority of
the population (47%) by 2050, according to Pew
Research Center population projections. (Census Bureau projections say the
change will occur in 2042).
Hispanics, already the nation’s largest minority
group, are projected to continue to account for most population growth by that
year.
BUT...
Couples are Happier...
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