“…Although several studies of marriage in different settings, including Korea, incorporate family background variables in quantitative analyses—father's occupation, mother's work status, father and mother's education, two‐parent households, etc. (Hu, 2016; Kim, 2017; Kim, 2020; Park, 2013; Raymo, 2003; Sweeney, 2002; Yu & Xie, 2015)—they seldom elaborate on the specific mechanisms through which parental socioeconomic resources matter for children's marriage outcomes. Instead, parental attributes are utilized as general proxies for overall resources that influence marital union.…”