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One in four Australian families have a female breadwinner says AMP.NATSEM report

One in four Australian households now have a female as their breadwinner.

More than half a million or one in four Australian households now have a female as their major breadwinner – 140,000 more households than 10 years ago, according to the latest AMP.NATSEM report.

The proportion of families with both parents working has risen dramatically, with 58 per cent of all ‘couple with children’ families having both parents in the workforce, compared to 40 per cent in the 1980s.

Australians are more likely to swap house keys than wedding rings with 78 per cent of people living together before marriage, up from 72 per cent 10 years ago, and a drop in the nation’s annual marriage rate from 6.6 marriages per 1,000 people to 5.5 in the past decade.

These are some of the key findings in the AMP.NATSEM Income and Wealth Report Modern Family which explores the changing shape of Australian families. The report analyses data from a variety of sources spanning from 2001 to 2011.

According to the report, the number of blended and step-families has doubled in recent decades, together making up almost 11 per cent of Australian families with dependent children, compared to 6.8 per cent in 1986.

While blended and step-families are on the increase, divorce rates in Australia have stabilised at 2.2 divorces per 1,000 people and marriages are lasting longer – on average 12 years, up from 10 years in 1991.

The report finds more than half of all Australians support equal rights for same-sex couples in relation to marriage and children, an increase of 14 percentage points in just over five years. A belief in equality for all extends across the generations, with 42 per cent of Baby Boomers and three in 10 older Australians supporting equal rights for same-sex couples.

The number of same-sex couples has increased 72 per cent in 10 years from 19,594 in 2001 to 33,714 in 2011, with most of this growth coming from non-metropolitan areas. This significant increase is likely to be driven by same-sex couples being more comfortable about disclosing their relationship.

AMP Chief Customer Officer Paul Sainsbury said today’s modern family is almost unrecognisable from the Mum, Dad and a couple of children households of recent decades.

“Today’s modern family is complex and diverse.  Living alongside more traditional families are blended and step-families, single parent families, de facto couples and same-sex families,” Mr Sainsbury said

“The report shows the divorce rate has stabilised, and divorces involving children have actually declined, perhaps because Australians are getting married later and the financial and psychological impact of relationship breakdowns is causing people to think twice.

“The cost of raising children, financial stress from divorce or coping in challenging economic times can have a significant impact on family stability, so it’s important that Australian families have their finances in order before challenges crop up,” Mr Sainsbury added.

The AMP.NATSEM Modern Family report analyses data from a variety of sources, including the 2011 Australian Census and the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey, which spans from 2001 to 2011.

Other key report findings

There are more female breadwinners than ever before

Families on lower incomes are more reliant on female breadwinners

Women come to the rescue when times get tough

Australian first-time mums are approaching 30

NSW is Australia’s marriage capital

The popularity of church weddings has taken a dramatic dive

More people live together prior to marriage in Tasmania than anywhere else

Australia’s fertility rate is below the population replacement level but trending up

We’re not the USA – the divorce rate in Australia has steadied at 2.2 per 1,000 people

The proportion of blended and step-families is on the rise

Blended and step-families are financially worse off

The majority of Australians support equal rights for same-sex couples

More than 22 per cent of female same-sex couples have children

Inner Sydney is the number one location for same-sex couples

NATSEM Principal Research Fellow Rebecca Cassells, and lead author of the report, said young people are no longer expected to marry in their early twenties, in a religious ceremony, and have three or four kids cared for at home by the mother while the husband heads off to work.

“Today’s modern family usually starts with a couple living together before marriage, perhaps deciding to delay having children, and when they do start a family, while it’s more common for women to be the primary carer, most mothers will quickly return to work, at least part-time,” Ms Cassells said.

“Given the enormous changes that have occurred over the past century, we can only begin to imagine how families will evolve in coming years,” said Ms Cassells.

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