Can Government Rescue Marriages?
By Dr Scott M Stanley & Dr Howard J Markman
The Move To Mandate Premarital Counseling
Following closely on the heels of the legislative movement to make divorce harder
is the movement to make marriages better by mandating premarital counseling as a
requirement for obtaining a marriage license. Some states are considering an
incentive model, with longer delays for getting a license unless a couple gets
premarital counseling (e.g., Maryland and Michigan) or by giving a tax break
(e.g., Iowa), while other states (e.g., Minnesota and Mississippi) are
considering an outright mandate for premarital counseling. The intention is to
help couples increase their odds for successful marriage from the start. The
good news is that couples can learn to have better marriages. The bad news is
that government force could lead to unintended negative consequences.
The Good News: Reducing Marital Distress and Divorce Is Possible
Our studies show that marital failure is predictable to a surprising degree--with
up to 90 percent accuracy in classification of future outcomes for research
samples, using only premarital data. Hence, for many couples the seeds of
divorce are present prior to marriage. The factors that predict marital failure
range from relatively static dimensions, such as history of parental divorce and
differences in religion, to more dynamic dimensions such as communication and
conflict management patterns. The dynamic factors make the most attractive
targets for premarital counseling because these factors are both highly
predictive of divorce and amenable to change. In essence, it is not how much
couples love each other, but how they handle conflict that best predicts future
marital distress or divorce--and conflict is inevitable.
Added to the prediction research, studies on our Prevention and Relationship
Enhancement Program (PREP) strongly suggest that couples can learn skills and
enhance ways of thinking--prior to marriage--that significantly improve their
odds of having good marriages. We and our colleagues in Germany have tracked the
positive effects of such training for years following the marriage ceremony, with
better communication, greater satisfaction, 50% lower break-up rates, and 50%
lower incidence of physical aggression.
The Bad News: Possible Unintended Negative Consequences
Trying to prevent marital distress is hardly controversial. The controversy is
whether or not governments should force it on a broad scale. Government mandated
premarital counseling may have serious negative effects that are not being
considered.
First, many segments of society are averse to increasing governmental
intervention in family life. The fact that it is harder to get a driver's
license than a marriage license is often mentioned in this debate, but getting a
marriage license is different. Sure, there are areas of personal behavior where
most would agree that the government should intrude--and some areas where the
issue is highly controversial. But are people really going to accept the
government's intrusion into marriage any more than they want the government
telling them how to raise their children?
Second, mandating premarital counseling would be a bureaucratic nightmare. There
would be endless debates about what should be required and who is qualified to
provide the training. Further, we note that premarital counseling is most often
conducted by religious institutions. Since government mandates usually come with
government standards, mandating premarital counseling could allow the government
unprecedented regulatory control over processes that are currently and
preeminently the province of religious institutions. This is a significant 1st
amendment concern.
Some will note that many religious institutions have been mandating premarital
counseling for years, so what's wrong with the government doing it, too? Since
religious institutions often are more deeply embedded in the lives and culture of
people than government is, they can likely mandate without the same degree of
negative consequences. After all, the idea is consistent with a degree of
accountability within the community of faith. It is also not unusual for
military institutions to mandate such training as a requirement for chapel based
marriages. However, since there is a preexisting education and training
mentality - as in religious institutions - this probably works more positively than
a broader-based government effort could.
Third, we are concerned that there are virtually no data on the effectiveness of
mandated programs while there is steadily growing evidence on the effectiveness
when couples volunteer for such programs. We do hope, over time, to have better
data on the effects of mandating premarital and marital training within both
religious and military institutions.
Given the possible negatives of various initiatives to strengthen the institution of marriage, we argue for a less complicated path until we have had more discussion and research on the effects of the alternatives.