The present study set out to examine the relationship between marital status, poverty
and depression in a sample of inner-city women. Single and married mothers were followed up over
a 2-year period during which time rates of psychosocial risk factors, onset of depression and
experience of chronic episodes were measured. Risk of onset was double among single mothers.
Single mothers were twice as likely as their married counterparts to be in financial hardship, despite
being twice as likely to be in full-time employment. Both of these factors were independently
associated with onset in single mothers. The link between them and onset was via their association
with humiliating or entrapping severe life events. Single parents were at a much raised risk of
experiencing these events. Onset was also more likely to follow such an event when women had poor
self-esteem and lack of support, both of which were more common among single mothers. These
risk factors were more frequently found among those in financial hardship. Financial hardship was
also related to risk of having a chronic episode (lasting at least a year), of which single parents were
also at greater risk. The majority of chronic episodes among single mothers had their origins in prior
marital difficulties or widowhood and rates of chronicity reduced with length of time spent in single
parenthood. Results are discussed in terms of an aetiological model of onset in which financial
hardship probably influences outcome at a wide variety of points.