An unusual way to get married

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A British cohort study included 1.6 million people born in the same week in 1970. In the first few weeks, data was collected on men who shared housework, cared for children, and cared for. Based on the data, Wendy Rashton, a lecturer on social policy in London economics and politics, examined 3,500 couples who did not divorce after the birth of a five-year-old child. In these families, 33% of women are working women and 51% of men cannot perform any or only one of the above tasks. 24% of them take on two tasks, 25% have a high sense of responsibility and take on all three tasks. Finally, the study shows the relationship between divorce and the role of women and men in families. A family where a woman does housework and a husband does housework is likely to divorce.
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Economists are particularly concerned about divorce rates and whether women work. The British Times quoted Wendy Rushton as saying he didn't care much about men's performance. Rushton noticed the role of men in the family. Studies show that if men do more housework while women work, the risk of divorce does not increase. Marriage is strong when men share housework, whether women work or not. "Employing women can affect family stability, but the risk of divorce is much lower if men share housework." Wendy Rashton trains men and women at home I believe the traditional family model is gone. Since 1975, many women have changed the structure of the labor market and challenged the notion of traditional gender roles.


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"In the past, we paid much attention to the external and national factors of women's work, and a lack of interest in the fields of business and sociology." It focuses on men's performance in marriage. " At the same time, Macromill, a Japanese internet research organization, published a survey. This shows that if men do more housework, their marriage will help stabilize.