Marriage behaviors of men in other groups rose and fell with the changes in the composition of the marriage market between 2000 and 2010. From the women‟s perspective, college-educated women in all types of union faced a shortage of eligible men in 2010, but availability of potential spouses generally improved for most women without a college degree. The lower panel of Table 2 shows that from both men‟s and women‟s perspectives, almost every group experienced a tremendous decline in propensity to marry, except for unions where at least one partner is college-educated (i.e., marriage types m3-f4, m4-f4, and m4-f3). One important finding to be noted is that despite a shortage of eligible men (with at least some tertiary education) for college-educated women, a positive change in force of attraction indicates that an increasing share of these women still managed to find a partner. In sharp contrast, the least educated men experienced a tremendous decline in marriage propensity despite being in a marriage market with a surplus of eligible women. Similarly, women without a college education also experienced much lower propensity to marry, even though most of them saw an improvement in eligible men.