Yorkshire Post

Traditiona­l marriage falls to lowest level since records began

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MARRIAGE RATES among opposite-sex couples have fallen to a record low, official figures show.

Rising costs associated with tying the knot were cited as one possible factor behind the drop.

Experts also suggested many people are focusing on other priorities such as education, starting a family or buying a house.

Figures for 2015 show marriage rates for opposite-sex couples were the lowest since data collection started in 1862, with 21.7 marriages per thousand unmarried men, and 19.8 marriages per thousand unmarried women in England and Wales.

The number of marriages between opposite-sex couples, 239,020, was the smallest for a calendar year since 2009.

But older age groups appear to be bucking the overall downward trend.

Marriage rates for opposite-sex couples marrying in 2015 were lower at all ages compared with a decade earlier – except for men aged 65 and over and women aged 55 and over, where the rates increased, according to the Office for National Statistics.

Nicola Haines, of the ONS, said: “Marriage rates for opposite-sex couples are now at their lowest level on record following a gradual long-term decline since the early 1970s.

“The number of marriages between opposite-sex couples decreased by 3.4 per cent in 2015, compared with 2014.

“Despite this overall decline, marriages at older ages rose; the number of weddings increased for men aged 50 and over and women aged 35 to 39 years and 45 and over.”

Harry Benson, research director at the Marriage Foundation, said the record low marriage rates “should give all policymake­rs deep cause for concern”. He added: “Britain already languishes in shame at the bottom of the developed world league table for family stability, almost entirely due to the trend away from marriage and formal commitment.”

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