divorce rate guide
 

Divorce_rates
Divorce Rates Around The World > An often cited statistic heard on talk radio is that half of the marriages in the United States end in divorce. But what does that rate statistic really mean? Anna And Betty Take two sisters, for example: Anna and Betty. Anna has been happily married to her first husband for ten years; after two failed marriages, Betty is happily married to her third husband. There are four marriages between the two of them, and their rate is 50%. Consider Anna's and Betty's husbands, Al and Bill, each of whom has been married one time. Among the four of them, three of these individuals have a rate of 0%, and one of them has a rate of 66%. Sixty-six divided by four is only 16.5, so it can also be said that their rate is 16.5%. Before Betty remarried, she was zero for two: two marriages and two divorces. At that time, her rate was 100% -- or was it 200%? As you can see, statistics can be interpreted several different ways, depending on the context in which data is viewed. Global Numbers One way to look at rates, and to compare the rate of failed marriages in the United States to other countries in the world, is to look at the number of divorces among 1,000 people. Applying this statistical sampling method to our example, we would compare Betty's two divorces to the number of people in both Anna's and Betty's families. Counting Anna, Al, Betty, Bill, Anna and Al's two children, Art and Alden, and Betty's son from her second husband, Bob, the rate comes to 28% using that example.

Using the rate of divorces per 1,000 people, the United States has a rate in 2000 of just 4.1%. That number sounds low compared to the 50% rate advertised by some anti-marriage talk radio hosts, but it actually is quite high compared to other nations. What nations have similar rates? Only one country, Russia, has a higher rate of failed marriage than the United States. The rate in Russia is 4.3%, and the rate in the Ukraine is 4%. Interestingly, the rate in Cuba, another communist country, is 3.54%. Even U.S. territories have relatively higher rates of people who get divorced than most other countries. The rate in Puerto Rico is 3.82%; in Guam, it is 4.34%. Contrast these rates with France (2%), Ecuador (.73%), and Canada (2.28%). Statistics can be fun to read and wonder about, but what do they really mean? It's up to each of us to decide for ourselves.

 
 
  Here are some articles to start with..

 Divorce Secrets            1000 Questions For Couples

1000 Questions For Couples

   Divorce Secrets

 
 
 
Divorce_advice
Getting Divorce Advice from a Trusted Source can Ease your TransitionThe end of a marriage can bring on so many changes, both tangible, physical changes like a change of Read more...
Why Men Divorce Women?
By James Walsh
They are expected to emotionally nurture and empower the other and pool their financial resources to buy family assets. Like women, men too have high expectations from their marriage. They Read more...
 
 
 
 
 
Google
 
 
Copyright 2007 by AccurateDivorce.com, All Rights Reserved