Abstract

Using pooled cross-sectional data from recent censuses and wage surveys age-specific models of marriage prevalence are estimated in order to examine whether rapid changes in the marital behavior of Japanese women reflect delayed marriage or an increase in the proportion who will never marry. Results indicate that higher wages for females higher educational attainment and recency of cohort are associated with lower marital prevalence at ages 30-34 consistent with an interpretation of increasing nonmarriage. Given the rapid pace with which Japans population is projected to age the rarity of nonmarital childbearing and the relative absence of family alternatives to marriage an increase in the proportion of those who never marry would have potentially major social economic and demographic consequences. This is a revised version of a paper originally presented at the 1997 Annual Meeting of the Population Association of America. (EXCERPT)

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