Study: A quarter of adults don’t want children — and they’re still happy
From: Michigan State University
June 16, 2021 -- Parenting is one of
life’s greatest joys, right? Not for everyone. New research from Michigan State
University psychologists examines characteristics and satisfaction of adults
who don’t want children.
As more people acknowledge they simply
don’t want to have kids, Jennifer
Watling Neal and Zachary Neal,
both associate professors in MSU’s department of
psychology, are among the first to dive deeper into how these “child-free”
individuals differ from others.
“Most studies haven’t asked the
questions necessary to distinguish ‘child-free’ individuals — those
who choose not to have children — from other types of nonparents,”
Jennifer Watling Neal said. “Nonparents can also include the ‘not-yet-parents’
who are planning to have kids, and ‘childless’ people who couldn’t have kids
due to infertility or circumstance. Previous studies simply lumped all
nonparents into a single category to compare them to parents.”
The study — published
June 16 in PLOS ONE — used a set of three questions to
identify child-free individuals separately from parents and other types of
nonparents. The researchers used data from a representative sample of 1,000
adults who completed MSU’s State of the State Survey, conducted by the
university’s Institute for Public Policy and Social Research.
“After controlling for demographic
characteristics, we found no differences in life satisfaction and limited
differences in personality traits between child-free individuals and parents,
not-yet-parents, or childless individuals,” Zachary Neal said. “We also found
that child-free individuals were more liberal than parents, and that people who
aren’t child-free felt substantially less warm toward child-free individuals.”
Beyond findings related to life
satisfaction and personality traits, the research unveiled additional
unexpected findings.
“We were most surprised by how many
child-free people there are,” Jennifer Watling Neal said. “We found that more
than one in four people in Michigan identified as child-free, which is much
higher than the estimated prevalence rate in previous studies that relied on
fertility to identify child-free individuals. These previous studies placed the
rate at only 2% to 9%. We think our improved measurement may have been able to
better capture individuals who identify as child-free.”
Given the large number of child-free
adults in Michigan, more attention needs to be paid to this group, the
researchers said. For example, the researchers explained that their study only
included one time point, so didn’t examine when people decided to be child-free
— however, they hope forthcoming research will help the public
understand both when people start identifying as child-free as well as the
factors that lead to this choice.
Study: Childfree
happiness | MSUToday | Michigan State University
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