fbpx
×

Log into your account

We have changed software providers for our subscription database. Old login credentials will no longer work. Please click the "Register" link below to create a new account. If you do not know your new account number you can contact [email protected]
Christian women prefer services to shopping
Nicole Neroulias, Religion News Service
September 10, 2010
2 MIN READ TIME

Christian women prefer services to shopping

Christian women prefer services to shopping
Nicole Neroulias, Religion News Service
September 10, 2010

Protestant and Catholic

women in the United States have grown unhappier since stores have stayed open

on Sundays, according to a study by economists from Israel’s Ben-Gurion

University of the Negev and Chicago’s DePaul University.

The study found that the

repeal of “blue law” restrictions on Sunday shopping has corresponded with

lower church attendance for white women. Meanwhile, the probability of women

becoming unhappy increased by 17 percent.

The study concludes that “an

important part of the decline in women’s happiness during the last three

decades can be explained by decline in religious participation,” said Danny

Cohen-Zada, an economics scholar at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.

The researchers analyzed

churchgoing habits of women from the National Opinion Research Center’s General

Social Survey, which has collected information about American characteristics

and attitudes from 1972 to 2008.

They looked at data from

states that have repealed “blue laws” restricting Sunday commerce — Indiana,

Minnesota, North Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and Vermont — compared to

others with no change.

The study followed up on a

2008 study published in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, which found that

states that had eliminated blue laws saw church attendance decline while drinking

and drug use increased.

Even when women noticed they

had been happier when malls were closed Sundays, they didn’t resume their

previous church habits, which the researchers speculated was due to a problem

of self-control and the addictive nature of shopping.

“People choose shopping,

like watching TV, because it provides immediate satisfaction,” Cohen-Zada said.

“That satisfaction lasts for the moment it’s being consumed and not much longer

than that. Religious participation, on the other hand, is not immediate.

Instead, it requires persistence over a period of time.”