Litcius/Paper detail

Do Income and Employment Uncertainty Affect Couple Stability? Evidence for France During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Anna Barbuscia, Ariane Pailhé, Anne Solaz, Epicov team, Nathalie Bajos, Josiane Warszawski, Guillaume Bagein, François Beck, Émilie Counil, Florence Jusot, Nathalie Lydié, Claude Martin, Laurence Meyer, Ariane Pailhé, Philippe Raynaud, Alexandra Rouquette, Delphine Rahib, Patrick Sicard, Rémy Slama, Alexis Spire

2023European Journal of Population / Revue européenne de Démographie14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Economic uncertainty and family dynamics are strictly connected. The increasing uncertainty generated by the Covid-19 pandemic is thus likely to affect couple relationships and stability, with potential opposite effects. Using data from the nationally representative EPICOV survey, that followed individuals throughout the first year of pandemic in France, we examined separation rates and how these were associated with different measures of employment and income uncertainty, including both pre-pandemic conditions and changes occurred during and after the first lockdown in Spring 2020 in France. Our results show increased rates of separation, especially among younger people, during the 6 months after the first lockdown, and a return to rates more similar to those observed in usual times, afterwards. Individuals who were unemployed and had lower income before the beginning of the pandemic were more likely to separate soon after the lockdown, while changes in employment conditions due to the lockdown were not linked with a higher separation risk. The job protection and the income compensation provided by the French state, as well a less stigmatising effect of unemployment occurred during the covid crisis, may explain the absence of effect. Self-declared deterioration in financial condition, especially when declared by men, was associated with higher separation risk for the whole year of observation.

Topics & Concepts

PandemicUnemploymentAffect (linguistics)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Demographic economicsSeparation (statistics)EconomicsSurvey data collectionCompensation (psychology)DemographyPsychologyMedicineEconomic growthSociologySocial psychologyStatisticsMathematicsInfectious disease (medical specialty)CommunicationPathologyDiseaseEmployment and Welfare StudiesPsychological Well-being and Life SatisfactionCOVID-19 Pandemic Impacts