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Merry now, marry later? Initial labor market conditions and marital intentions in the Philippines

Merry now, marry later? Initial labor market conditions and marital intentions in the Philippines
Merry now, marry later? Initial labor market conditions and marital intentions in the Philippines
Objective: Following the Oppenheimerian hypothesis that employment stability partly explains (earlier) marriage timing, particularly among career-oriented young adults, we test the relationship between precarious initial labor market conditions and marital intentions among the highly educated population in the Philippines.

Background: A substantial body of literature suggests that early career employment instability is associated with family formation. The Philippines, as the only country besides the Vatican without a legal provision for divorce, presents a unique and novel context for analyzing both the institution of and preferences for marriage.

Method: Using data from a nationally representative graduate tracer survey in the Philippines, we estimate the association between initial labor market conditions and marital intentions using inverse probability weighted (IPW) logistic regression models to account for selection into the never-married population upon completing higher education.

Results: Our analysis highlights three findings. First, an overwhelming majority (95%) intend to get married across all labor market statuses, suggesting a near-universal idealization of marriage among highly educated young adults. Second, precarious labor market states are not associated with marital intentions except for economically inactive females. Finally, precarity matters for the expressed timing of marriage - compared to their stably employed counterparts, marriage-oriented young adults on fixed-term contracts, unemployment, or economic inactivity express a slightly later ideal period to marry.

Conclusion: These descriptive findings speak to the idea that in societies where marriage is considered a near-universally ideal life course milestone, young adults in “merry” employment conditions intend to marry sooner rather than later.
2699-2337
307-317
Ramos, Vincent Jerald
9dfe0a55-e987-4481-8690-429d8ac83dc9
Vital, Marianne
63f4f46d-998b-420c-b765-00ffd4165f81
Ramos, Vincent Jerald
9dfe0a55-e987-4481-8690-429d8ac83dc9
Vital, Marianne
63f4f46d-998b-420c-b765-00ffd4165f81

Ramos, Vincent Jerald and Vital, Marianne (2025) Merry now, marry later? Initial labor market conditions and marital intentions in the Philippines. Journal of Family Research, 37, 307-317.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: Following the Oppenheimerian hypothesis that employment stability partly explains (earlier) marriage timing, particularly among career-oriented young adults, we test the relationship between precarious initial labor market conditions and marital intentions among the highly educated population in the Philippines.

Background: A substantial body of literature suggests that early career employment instability is associated with family formation. The Philippines, as the only country besides the Vatican without a legal provision for divorce, presents a unique and novel context for analyzing both the institution of and preferences for marriage.

Method: Using data from a nationally representative graduate tracer survey in the Philippines, we estimate the association between initial labor market conditions and marital intentions using inverse probability weighted (IPW) logistic regression models to account for selection into the never-married population upon completing higher education.

Results: Our analysis highlights three findings. First, an overwhelming majority (95%) intend to get married across all labor market statuses, suggesting a near-universal idealization of marriage among highly educated young adults. Second, precarious labor market states are not associated with marital intentions except for economically inactive females. Finally, precarity matters for the expressed timing of marriage - compared to their stably employed counterparts, marriage-oriented young adults on fixed-term contracts, unemployment, or economic inactivity express a slightly later ideal period to marry.

Conclusion: These descriptive findings speak to the idea that in societies where marriage is considered a near-universally ideal life course milestone, young adults in “merry” employment conditions intend to marry sooner rather than later.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 18 August 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508404
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508404
ISSN: 2699-2337
PURE UUID: 39a35cbb-ea95-4cd3-ae69-9d8d91569808
ORCID for Vincent Jerald Ramos: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9709-4183

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 20 Jan 2026 17:58
Last modified: 24 Jan 2026 03:22

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Contributors

Author: Vincent Jerald Ramos ORCID iD
Author: Marianne Vital

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