In it together: Couples' life satisfaction takes a bigger hit when one partner loses their job, than when both do

If your partner were to lose their job, you might think keeping your own employment would cushion the psychological blow. In fact new research finds that life satisfaction is higher for couples who share their unemployed predicament, than for couples where only one partner loses their job.Maike Luhmann and her colleagues analysed over ten years of longitudinal data from 3000 co-habiting couples in Germany, where one or both partners had gone through an unemployment. If one partner lost their job, the second partner's life satisfaction typically dipped shortly before the job loss, took a large dive the year it actually occurred, and continued to decline during the years of unemployment - mirroring at every step the (greater) loss felt by the unemployed individual.When it came to the employment status of the second partner, two theories were fighting it out. The financial stress hypothesis would suggest that a household with at least one income is more able to supply its material needs, with positive consequences for the couple’s life satisfaction. By contrast, the "shared fate" hypothesis predicts that empathy and support are easier to produce when both parties are in the same boat.The data supported the shared fate hypothesis – when one partner was unemployed and the second partner remained in work, both parties reported lower life satisfaction than when both partners ended up without a job. The researchers reasoned that when one partner remains in work, it is easier for ...
Source: BPS RESEARCH DIGEST - Category: Psychiatrists and Psychologists Authors: Source Type: blogs