We all like to believe that, as unique individuals, we’re masters of our own destiny and originals in our own right. We may still cling to this privilege in the
Caroline Berghammer of the Vienna Institute of Demography,
through analysis of the 2008-2009 Austrian Generations and Gender Survey,
charted family life paths and individual likelihood of choosing them, based on
personal religiosity, family size growing up, and other factors. (Because Austria ’s
religious population is mostly Catholic, Berghammer only includes Catholics in
her “religious” category.)
This chart lays out the most common “family life paths” in Austria ,
among the men and women included in the study who were between the ages of 40
and 45. The numbers represent how many children a person has, and the colors
indicate a person’s relationship status.
Berghammer found that those who attend Mass monthly or
weekly are more likely to marry directly, without cohabiting, and to have at
least two children. She also found that a person’s odds of cohabiting
sequentially (versus his likelihood to follow the most common life path—cohabiting,
eventually marrying and having two kids along the way) are halved if they
attend religious services.
Those who don’t claim any religion are 87% more likely than
Roman Catholics to have children outside of marriage. Additionally, for every
sibling a person has, he or she is 29% more likely to choose traditional
parenthood and to have three or more children rather than the aforementioned “most
common life path.”
Notably, people who consider themselves religious but don’t
regularly attend church don’t seem to differ much from those who don’t consider
themselves religious.
Figures and chart: Caroline Berghammer, “Family life
trajectories and religiosity in
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