Gender and marital satisfaction: data from the National Survey of Families and Households
Schumm, W.R.; Webb, F.J.; Bollman, S.R.
Psychological Reports 83(1): 319-327
1998
ISSN/ISBN: 0033-2941 PMID: 9775689 DOI: 10.2466/pr0.1998.83.1.319Document Number: 279293
In 1972, Bernard argued that marriage was good for men and bad for women. Subsequent research noted that wives, on average, reported lower marital satisfaction than husbands. Furthermore, when differences within couples existed on marital satisfaction, the wife was usually the less satisfied spouse; however, most previous studies of the gender/marital satisfaction relationship had not been based on nationally representative samples. A nationally representative sample from the 1988 Survey of Families and Households was used to assess the relationship of gender with marital satisfaction. Within-couple analyses indicated that wives were less satisfied with their marriages than husbands and that, when substantial within-couple differences occurred with respect to marital satisfaction, the wife was usually the less satisfied spouse. Results provide at least small support for feminist assertions about the relatively adverse nature of marriage for women in the United States.