It rejects the arguments from the Law Commission for the elimination of fault from divorce proceedings.
The report rejects calls to give cohabitees similar legal rights as married couples because such a step would have an adverse effect on the distinctive status of marriage. Instead, a greater public education effort should be made to dispel the widespread but mistaken belief that the law recognises cohabitees as “common law spouses”.
The Centre for Social Justice said the high level of cohabiting families who split up was worrying. Approximately half of all cohabiting couples with children will split by the time the child is five, the equivalent figure for married couples is 1 in 12.
Polling carried out by YouGov for the report showed that most people (57 per cent) believed the law should promote marriage in preference to other kinds of family structure, such as cohabitation, with 27 per cent disagreeing. Fifty eight per cent of people thought that giving cohabitees similar legal rights as the married would undermine marriage and make people less likely to wed.
The report backs a tax break to promote marriage and finds that this is supported by 85 per cent of people, according to the poll.
The authors reject the notion that marriage is a “lifestyle choice”.
They say it has been recognised by anthropologists as being a universal institution that has existed for thousands of years throughout human history.
Only since the 1970s has marriage come under threat with the rise of cohabitation: one per cent of women marrying in the 1950s cohabited with their husbands-to-be, compared with 80 per cent today.
But despite the rise of cohabitation, marriage remains popular. Some 75 per cent of couples living together say they want to get married.
The report says that marriage brings many benefits to couples, children, individuals, the wider family and the nation as a whole.
It states: “Marriage has causal effects that help to stabilise the couple relationship and reduce the chance of breakdown.
“When a couple get married they make public commitments to each other and they enter into a set of socially-defined relationships with kin and society at large.
“They take on new social roles which are conventionally regarded as permanent. The resulting ties and expectations alter the behaviour and perceptions of the couple and help to strengthen and stabilise their relationship.”
The authors call on the Government to do much more to promote marriage and to help couples in difficulty.
“A government that wants to prevent family breakdown and benefit society cannot ignore these statistical differences and research evidence any longer, but must do all it can to deal with this issue," they say.
“It is clear that marriage is good for society and yet research indicates that while aspirations are high for marriage, and married couples prize their relationships, there is a sense that sections of society do not place a high enough value on or truly recognise the benefits of marriage.
“It has been neglected by Parliament over many years. An inappropriate anxiety not to exclude or to appear to cast judgement on other lifestyle relationships has resulted in marriage being devalued."

