Demography
The Demographic and Socioeconomic Consequences of Restricting Access to Marriage for Young Immigrants in Denmark
Abstract
In July 2002, Danish reforms limited the marriage opportunities for all Danish and non–European Union (EU) citizens younger than 24 living in Denmark who wished (or whose parents wished for them) to marry someone from outside the EU. Before the reform, more than 80% of first- and second-generation immigrants from outside the EU married spouses from their parents’ origin countries; the reform drastically changed their marriage market. We examine the policy’s effects on subsequent marriage behavior, the transition to motherhood, human capital accumulation, and labor market activities using full-population administrative data on 578,380 Danish-born first- and second-generation non-EU immigrants born in 1972–1990 and a difference-in-differences design. We find that the policy delayed marriages among individuals with an immigrant background, extended premarital cohabitation, changed the composition of spouses, and delayed and decreased in-wedlock fertility. Finally, the duration of obtained formal education increased. Our results emphasize that reforms constraining access to external marriage markets can have lasting impacts on marriage demographics among immigrants.
Related publications
Research report
The Demographic and Socioeconomic Consequences of Restricting Access to Marriage for Young Migrant Women in Denmark
Go to research reportLatest releases on the same welfare topic
Knowledge overview
The intergenerational transmission of educational attainment among immigrants and their descendants is not significantly different from that among native Danes
December 2025
Research report
Effects of Higher Staff-Child Ratios in Danish Kindergartens
December 2025
Research report
Workplace Amenities and the Gender Pay Gap
December 2025
Analysis
The welfare workers of the metropolis still live in Copenhagen
November 2025