TY - JOUR AU - Bennett,Neil G. AU - Blanc,Ann Klimas AU - Bloom,David E. TI - Commitment and the Modern Union: Assessing the Link Between Premarital Cohabitation and Subsequent Marital Stability JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 2416 PY - 1987 Y2 - October 1987 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w2416 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w2416.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Neil G. Bennett Baruch College/ CUNY Institute for Demographic Research Box D-901 One Bernard Baruch Way New York, NY 10010 Tel: 646/660-6779 Fax: 646/660-6784 E-Mail: Neil.Bennett@baruch.cuny.edu David E. Bloom Harvard School of Public Health Department of Global Health and Population 665 Huntington Ave. Boston, MA 02115 Tel: 617/432-0866 Fax: 617/432-6733 E-Mail: dbloom@hsph.harvard.edu AB - In recent years, the incidence of premarital cohabitation has increased dramatically in many countries of Western Europe and in the United States. As cohabitation becomes a more common experience, it is increasingly important to understand the links between cohabitation and other steps in the process of family formation and dissolution. We focus on the relationship between pre- marital cohabitation and subsequent marital stability, and analyze data from the 1981 Women in Sweden survey using a hazards model approach. Our results indicate that women who premaritally cohabit have almost 80 percent higher marital dissolution rates than those who do not cohabit. Women who cohabit for over three years prior to marriage have over 50 percent higher dissolution rates than women who cohabit for shorter durations. Last, cohabitors and non-cohabitors whose marriages have remained intact for eight years appear to have identical dissolution rates after that time. In addition, we provide evidence that strongly suggests a weaker commitment, on the part of those who cohabit premaritally, to the institution of marriage. ER -