Abstract

In the paper, we propose an explanation for almost a century of changes in the U.S. marriage rates. We do this in three stages. In the rst stage, we use reduced-form methods to provide evidence on the following two results. First, a single variable, cohort size, can account for almost all the variation in marriage rates since the early 1930s for both blacks and whites. Second, an increase in cohort size reduces marriage rates, whereas a decline in cohort size has the opposite eect. The most convincing evidence on the relationship between cohort size and marriage rates is obtained by using as a source of exogenous variation dierences across states in mobilization rates during World War II. In the second stage, we develop a dynamic search model of the marriage market that can generate the observed patterns. Using the model we show that, qualitatively, it can generate the negative relationship between cohort size and marriage rates. We then derive a testable implication from the model: an increase in cohort size reduces the age dierence at marriage and vice versa. In the last stage, we investigate whether the model is consistent with the data. We rst use the derived implication to test the model and fail to reject it. We then estimate the model and evaluate

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