Gregory Clark () and Neil Cummins ()
Additional contact information
Gregory Clark: Department of Economics, Postal: University of Southern Denmark, Campusvej 55, DK-5230 Odense M, Denmark
Neil Cummins: Department of Economic History, Postal: London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, London, WC2A 2AE, UK
Abstract: It is widely believed that women value social status in marital partners more than men, leading to female marital hypergamy, and more female intergenerational social mobility. A recent paper on Norway, for example, reports significant female hypergamy, even today, as measured by parental status of men and women in partnerships. Using evidence from more than 33 million marriages and 67 million births in England and Wales 1837-2022 we show that there was never within this era any period of significant hypergamous marriage by women. The average status of women’s fathers was always close to that of their husbands’ fathers. Consistent with this there was no differential tendency in England of men and women to marry by social status. The evidence is of strong symmetry in marital behaviors between men and women throughout. There is also ancillary evidence that physical attraction cannot have been a very significant factor in marriages in any period 1837-2021, based on the correlation observed in underlying social abilities.
Keywords: Hypergamy; marital assortment; female social mobility
Language: English
24 pages, May 1, 2023
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