Unemployment, Conflicts and Partnership Stability: An Application of an Actor-Partner Interdependence Model (First Results)

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Unemployment, Conflicts and Partnership Stability: An Application of an Actor-Partner Interdependence Model (First Results) Bernd Weiß a, Katharina Loter a,b & Michael Wagner a a Institute of Sociology and Social Psychology University of Cologne, Germany b Research Training Group SOCLIFE University of Cologne, Germany bernd.weiss@uni-koeln.de loter@wiso.uni-koeln.de mwagner@wiso.uni-koeln.de International User Conference of the German Family Panel pairfam October 9-10, 2013

2 Overview 1. Introduction 2. Previous Research and Theoretical Background 3. Data and Method 4. Results 5. Conclusions 6. References

3 Problem and Research Questions Unemployment indicates and causes problems at the macroas well as micro-level. We are interested in micro-level effects, esp. family life and intimate partnerships: Does unemployment affect relationship stability? If it does, can we explain the mechanisms that link unemployment and relationship stability? Is it a direct (via external constrains/barriers) or an indirect effect (spillover effect)? Does the link vary between: different level of institutionalization (LAT, cohabiting and married couples)? females and males?

4 Overview 1. Introduction 2. Previous Research and Theoretical Background

5 Macro- and Micro-Level Findings Macro-Level Negative (bivariate) association between unemployment rate and divorce in Europe; no longer statistically significant in multiple regression models (Kalmijn, 2007). Positive (bivariate) correlation between US states unemployment rate and divorce rate, but turns negative when divided into time periods (Amato & Beattie, 2011). Micro-Level Findings vary by sex, duration of partnership, and employment status of both partners (e.g., Jalovaara, 2003, 2002) Unemployment increases the risk of divorce (e.g., Hansen, 2005; Kraft, 2001)

6 Why Direct Effects of Unemployment on Separation? For marriages: Divorce is expensive (as well as life after divorce). Unemployment decreases the chance of finding alternative partners. For females: Due to lack of financial resources and her dependency on her husband/male partner.

7 Why Indirect Effects of Unemployment on Divorce? Social and psychological stress Aneshensel (1992) conflicts (+) & appropriate conflict behavior (-) Lewis/Spanier (1979) Gottman, (1993) Karney/Bradbury (1995) relationship satisfaction (-) SEPARATION/DIVORCE

8 Conceptual Model Other M CB M Unemployed M FoC M Sat M Separation FoC F Sat F Unemployed F CB F Other F Control variables are not shown; FoC: Frequency of conflicts; CB: Aggressive conflict behavior; Sat: Relationship satisfaction;

9 Overview 1. Introduction 2. Previous Research and Theoretical Background 3. Data and Method

10 Data First four waves of the German Family Panel (pairfam), release 4.0 (Nauck, Brüderl, Huinink, & Walper, 2013). A detailed description of the study can be found in (Huinink et al., 2011). Here: 4,706 heterosexual dyads (and approx. 105,000 person-months) marriageable age: one partner is 18+, the other partner is 16+ (at each wave) age of consent: both partners were at least 14 at partnership begin At least one measurement per couple (w1, w2, w3 or w4) Left truncated and right censored panel data

11 Operationalization Relationship dissolution: 1: Yes, 0: No; between any two waves. Relationship satisfaction (TVC 2 ): Overall, how satisfied are you with your relationship? (0: Very dissatisfied 10: Very satisfied). Employment status (TVC; lagged by 3 months): 0: full/part time employed, 1: unemployed, 2: other (e.g., students, retired persons, housewife, etc.); starting with wave 1. Frequency of conflicts (TVC): How often do you and [name partner] disagree and quarrel? ; How often are you and [name partner] annoyed or angry with each other? (1: never 5: always). Aggressive conflict behavior (TVC): And how often did you engage in any of these behaviors : (1) Insult or verbally abuse your partner, (2) Yell at your partner (1: never/almost never 5: very often). Control variables: Age when the relationship began (in years); relationship duration (TVC) in years; number of previous relationships; panel wave

12 Analyzing Dyadic Data with an Event Variable Dyadic data can be analyzed with the actor-partner interdependence model (APIM) (Kenny, Kashy, & Cook, 2006). The APIM is estimated using a path model approach. The central endogenous variable is an event (separation) and a discrete-time event history analysis (EHA) model is estimated; the unit of analysis are person-months (in a path model not statistically independent, clustered standard errors are estimated). Our model is a mixture of an APIM and an EHA model, first introduced by Arránz Becker and Lois (2012), Arránz Becker (2013), Lois (2013) 3. 3 We would like to thank Oliver Arránz-Becker and Daniel Lois who provided us with initial Mplus code.

13 Overview 1. Introduction 2. Previous Research and Theoretical Background 3. Data and Method 4. Results

14 Multi-group Path Model Mplus 6.11 (Muthén & Muthén, 1998) was used to fit a multi-group path model. Multiple imputed data sets (m = 10) were created with R s Amelia II package (Version 1.7.2, built: 2013-04-03); Honaker, King, & Blackwell, 2011). Some fit indices: Chi2 (36) = 97.15, p < 0.01 RMSEA = 0.007 CFI = 0.993 TLI = 0.947

15 Path Model for Living-Apart-Together Couples Other M CB M Unemployed M FoC M 0.25*** -0.72*** Sat M Separation Unemployed F FoC F 0.22*** -0.92*** Sat F Other F CB F ***: p < 0:01, **: p < 0:05, *: p < 0:10; Control variables are not shown; FoC: Frequency of conflicts; CB: Aggressive conflict behavior; Sat: Relationship satisfaction;

16 Path Model for Cohabiting Couples Other M CB M Unemployed M FoC M 0.22*** -0.80*** Sat M Separation Unemployed F FoC F 0.22*** -0.89*** Sat F Other F CB F ***: p < 0:01, **: p < 0:05, *: p < 0:10; Control variables are not shown; FoC: Frequency of conflicts; CB: Aggressive conflict behavior; Sat: Relationship satisfaction;

17 Path Model for Married Couples Other M CB M Unemployed M FoC M -0.93*** Sat M Separation Unemployed F FoC F 0.21*** -0.93*** Sat F Other F CB F ***: p < 0:01, **: p < 0:05, *: p < 0:10; Control variables are not shown; FoC: Frequency of conflicts; CB: Aggressive conflict behavior; Sat: Relationship satisfaction;

18 Overview 1. Introduction 2. Previous Research and Theoretical Background 3. Data and Method 4. Results 5. Conclusions

19 Summary Employment status affects the likelihood of partnership dissolution; a direct effect was found for married couples only: For males: unemployed(male) -> (+) separation ( her divorce, Kalmijn and Poortman (2006)) For females: others(female) -> (-) separation (barriers: financial dependence). For all couples: indirect effects of unemployment on relationship dissolution. The higher the level of institutionalization: the higher the total indirect effect, the more statistically significant actor and partner effects for communication variables and relationship satisfaction

20 Limitations (and Future Research) No discussion regarding reversed causality or spurious correlation (heterogeneity; Blekesaune (2008)). Selectivity issues. No control for the presence of children. No interaction between conflict behavior and frequency of conflicts on relationship satisfaction (Wagner & Weiß, 2005, 2010).

21 References Arránz Becker, Oliver and Daniel Lois (2012). Competing Pleasures? The Impact of Leisure Time Use on the Transition to Parenthood. In: Journal of Family Issues 34.5, pp. 661 688. ISSN: 0192-513X, 1552-5481. DOI: 10.1177/0192513X12437694. Blekesaune, Morton (2008). Unemployment and partnership dissolution. Institute for Social and Economic Research. Gottman, John Mordechai (1993). A Theory of Marital Dissolution and Stability. In: Journal of Family Psychology 7.1, pp. 57 75. Gottman, John M. et al. (1998). Predicting marital happiness and stability from newlywed interactions. In: Journal of Marriage & the Family 60.1, pp. 5 22. Hansen, Hans-Tore (2005). Unemployment and Marital Dissolution - A Panel Data Study of Norway. In: European Sociological Review 21.2, pp. 135 148. Honaker, James, Gary King, and Matthew Blackwell (2011). Amelia II: A Program for Missing Data. In: Journal of Statistical Software 45.7, pp. 1 47. Huinink, Johannes et al. (2011). Panel Analysis of Intimate Relationships and Family Dynamics (pairfam): Conceptual framework and design. In: Zeitschrift für Familienforschung 23, pp. 77 101.

22 References Jalovaara, Marika (November 2002). Socioeconomic differentials in divorce risk by duration of marriage. In: Demographic Research 7, pp. 537 564. Jalovaara, Marika (2003). The Joint Effects of Marriage Partners Socioeconomic Positions on the Risk of Divorce. In: Demography 40.1, pp. 67 81. Kalmijn, Matthijs (2007). Explaining cross-national differences in marriage, cohabitation, and divorce in Europe, 1990-2000. In: Population Studies 61.3, pp. 243 263. Kalmijn, Matthijs and Anne-Rigt Poortman (2006). His or her divorce? The gendered nature of divorce and its determinants. In: European Sociological Review 22.2, pp. 201 214. Karney, Benjamin R. and Thomas N. Bradbury (1995). The Longitudinal Course of Marital Quality and Stability: A Review of Theory, Method and Research. In: Psychological Bulletin 118, pp. 3 34. Kenny, David A., Deborah A. Kashy, and William L. Cook (2006). Dyadic Data Analysis. New York: Guilford Press. Kraft, Kornelius (2001). Unemployment and the separation of married couples. In: Kyklos: Internationale Zeitschrift für Sozialwissenschaften 54.1, pp. 67 88.

23 References Lewis, Robert A. and Graham B. Spanier (1979). Theorizing About the Quality and Stability of Marriage. In: Contemporary Theories About the Family. General Theories/Theoretical Orientations. Ed. by Wesley R. Burr et al. New York: Free Press, pp. 268 294. Lois, Daniel (September 2013). Zur Erklärung von sozialer Ansteckung beim Übergang zur Elternschaft. de. In: KZfSS Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie 65.3, pp. 397 422. Muthén, Linda A. and Bengt O. Muthén (1998). Mplus User s Guide. Vol. 6.11. Los Angeles, CA: Muthén & Muthén. Nauck, Bernhard et al. (2013). Beziehungs- und Familienpanel (pairfam). In: GESIS Datenarchiv, Köln. ZA5678 Datenfile Version 4.0.0. DOI: doi:10.4232/pairfam.5678.3.0.0. Wagner, Michael and Bernd Weiß (2005). Konflikte in Partnerschaften. Erste Befunde der Kölner Paarbefragung. In: Zeitschrift für Familienforschung 17.3, pp. 217 247. Weiß, Bernd and Michael Wagner (2010). Erwerbssituation und Partnerschaft: Deutsche und türkische Paare im Vergleich. In: Komparative empirische Sozialforschung. Ed. by Tilo Beckers et al. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, pp. 169 198.