Where have I got to? Associations of age at marriage with marital household assets in educated and uneducated women in lowland Nepal
Akanksha A. Marphatia, Naomi M. Saville, Dharma S. Manandhar, Mario Cortina-Borja, Jonathan C. K. Wells

TL;DR
This study examines how the age at which women in Nepal marry relates to the wealth of their marital households, and how this varies by education level.
Contribution
The study investigates the association between marriage age and marital household wealth, distinguishing between educated and uneducated women in Nepal.
Findings
For uneducated women, marrying later was associated with higher marital household asset scores.
Educated women who married later had higher marital household asset scores, but the effect varied by education level.
Delaying marriage beyond 16 years had modest benefits for marital wealth among uneducated women.
Abstract
Women’s underage marriage (<18 years) is associated with adverse maternal and child health outcomes. Poverty in the natal household has been widely considered to be a key risk factor for underage marriage, but the evidence base is unreliable. When investigating this issue, most studies use marital wealth inappropriately, as a proxy for wealth in the natal household. In contrast, we investigated whether the timing of women’s marriage was associated with the wealth of the households they marry into, and how this may vary by women’s education level. This approach allows us to explore a different set of research questions which help to understand the economic value placed on the timing of women’s marriage. We used data on 3,102 women aged 12–34 years, surveyed within 1 year of marriage, from the cluster-randomized Low Birth Weight South Asia Trial in lowland rural Nepal. Linear…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Demographic Trends and Gender Preferences · Family Dynamics and Relationships
