January is nick-named the "divorce month" because of an uptick in activity for divorce lawyers after the New Year. Yet, January to April 15th is also a very low period in terms of people inquiring about divorce mediation. The reason is that couples generally want to know where they stand financially before pursuing divorce.
And, with the economy improving in 2024, people may be less inclined to wait. While anecdotal evidence abounds, hard figures are more elusive. An analysis of national divorce filings between 2008 and 2011 by legal information website FindLaw.com found a spike in January and a gradual rise until a peak in late March.
UPDATE 2024: The exclusivity of marriage in the contemporary era has dire, compounding consequences across generations. As researchers Shelly Lundberg, Robert A. Pollak and Jenna Stearns document, in 1960, people with and without college degrees married and formed families in a similar manner, but today, just 11% of childbirths for those with college degrees are non-marital, while 58% of childbirths for those without are. This cleavage makes possible what the Brookings Institution's Melissa Kearney describes as "two-parent privilege," an emerging phenomenon through which well-off couples transmit educational and economic advantages to their children. Viewed from this angle, it should not surprise us that many Americans think the rich are galloping ever further ahead.
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