SINGAPORE : A larger proportion of divorces were initiated by the wives last year as compared to 1999, according to the latest statistics on marriages and divorces published by the Department of Statistics (DOS).
The publication said wives initiated 64 per cent of all non-Muslim
divorces and 66 per cent of Muslim divorces last year, compared to 62
per cent and 60 per cent in 1999.
"Having lived apart or separated for three years or more" and
"Unreasonable behaviour" were the main reasons cited for almost all (97
per cent) of non-Muslim divorces in 2009.
Among Muslims, "Infidelity" was the main reason cited (21 per cent),
followed by "Personality difference" (16 per cent).
A higher proportion of males (29 per cent) than females (8.7 per cent)
petitioned on the ground of "Personality difference".
The median marriage duration before divorces was 10.1 years. Divorcing
Muslims have a shorter median duration of marriage (8.3 years) compared
to non-Muslims (10.5 years).
Couples who were married for 5 to 9 years accounted for the largest
group (33 per cent) of non-Muslim divorces.
In contrast, among Muslim divorces last year, couples who were married
for less than 5 years were the largest group (31 per cent), followed by
couples who were married for 5 to 9 years (26 per cent).
As for the number of marriages, it rose for a sixth successive year last
year. It went up 6 per cent to 26,081.
The number of marriages registered under the Women's Charter increased,
which offset a 4 per cent decline in the number of Muslim marriages.
DOS said while the number of marriages rose, the general marriage rates
declined.
Among unmarried male residents, the general marriage rate declined
slightly from 43.9 marriages per thousand unmarried males in 2008 to
43.6 in 2009. Among unmarried female residents, the general marriage
rate declined from 41.9 marriages per thousand unmarried females in 2008
to 41.1 in 2009.
Marriage rates fell across the younger age groups of below 30 years.
Males aged 25-29 years and females aged 20-24 years experienced the
largest fall compared to 2000.
The peak age group for men marrying shifted from 25-29 years in 1990 and
2000 to 30-34 years in 2009. The peak age group for women marrying
remained at 25-29 years in 2009.
Men and women are also marrying later in life. For men, the median age
at first marriage rose from 28.5 years in 1999 to 29.8 years in 2009.
For women, it rose from 26.0 years to 27.5 years.
The median age at remarriage also rose. The median age of grooms who
were remarrying rose from 39.8 years in 1999 to 41.8 years in 2009. For
the brides, it increased from 34.2 years to 35.7 years.
The delay in marriage occurred among grooms and brides of all
educational groups, except for Muslim grooms and brides with
post-secondary qualifications.
In 2009, the median age at first marriage was highest for both
non-Muslim and Muslim grooms with primary or no education at 40.7 years
and 31.0 years respectively.
In contrast, the median age at first marriage for both non-Muslim and
Muslim brides was highest for those with university qualifications at
28.3 years and 27.3 years respectively.
- CNA/al
haiz
cool ![]()
bad news for the nation.
Originally posted by ~PEPPER~:bad news for the nation.
in terms of population? No worries on that ![]()
Originally posted by de_middle:in terms of population? No worries on that
I see. Import foreign talent?
Singapore guys are more willing to accept foreign wives from China, Vietam, Thailand compare to Singapore woman. Suka suka divorce, it's their lose anyway.
good lor