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Title: Status Maintenance or Status Competition? Wife's Relative Wages as a Determinant of Labor Supply and Marital Instability
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. D'Amico, Ronald
Status Maintenance or Status Competition? Wife's Relative Wages as a Determinant of Labor Supply and Marital Instability
Social Forces 61,4 (June 1983): 1186-1205.
Also: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2578286
Cohort(s): Mature Women
Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
Keyword(s): Earnings, Husbands; Earnings, Wives; Employment; Family Resources; Household Income; Marital Instability; Oppenheimer's Model; Transfers, Financial; Wages, Women

Permission to reprint the abstract has not been received from the publisher.

This paper tests two contending theories about the effect of the interaction between husband's and wife's earnings capabilities on the wife's labor force participation and on the probability of marital dissolution. The first of these is Parsons' status competition model which suggests that, other things equal, the higher a woman's wage potential relative to her husband's, the more peripheral should be her labor force attachment. Violation of this constraint by her employment in a status competitive position is presumed to lead to increased risk of marital disruption. By contrast, Oppenheimer's status maintenance model proposes that the family's efforts to enhance its position in the socioeconomic hierarchy is an inducement to the wife's employment the more congruent her potential labor force achievement is with her husband's. Our results generally support the Oppenheimer model, although some support for Parsons' model was found. The paper concludes by emphasizing the need for study of the interactive linkages between husbands' and wives' careers.
Bibliography Citation
D'Amico, Ronald. "Status Maintenance or Status Competition? Wife's Relative Wages as a Determinant of Labor Supply and Marital Instability." Social Forces 61,4 (June 1983): 1186-1205.