More Obvious Stuff On Sexual Attraction And Marriage
- "Why Aren't More Wives Outearning Their Husbands?" asks Derek Thompson in The Atlantic. The distribution of the wife's share of income has a hard break around 50%, as shown here, with a significant disparity on the right side. This is not a normal distribution (emboldening mine):
This drop-off is simply too steep to be explained by randomness or classical economics. If men and women were forming marriages without concern for relative incomes, we'd expect a smoother distribution curve...
In a cool new paper,
Marianne Bertrand, Jessica Pan, and Emir Kamenica pose a theory that
some people might find controversial but others might find intuitive: What if there's a deficit of marriages where the wife is the top earner
because -- to put things bluntly -- husbands hate being out-earned by
their wives, and wives hate living with husbands who resent them?
If this
were true, we would expect to see at least three four
other things to be
true. First, we'd expect marriages with female breadwinners to be
surprisingly rare. Second, we'd expect them to produce unhappier
marriages. Third, we might expect these women to cut back on hours, do
more household [chores], or make other gestures to make their husbands feel
better. Fourth, we'd expect these marriages to end more in divorce. Lo
and behold (as you no doubt guessed), the economists found all of those
assumptions borne out by the evidence.
The assumption that women have nothing to do with these choices is a peculiar one, especially considering the next item...
- "Different impacts of resources on opposite sex ratings of physical attractiveness by males and females", Guanlin Wang, et al., Evolution and Human Behavior, March, 2018, pp. 220-225. Abstract:
Parental investment
hypotheses regarding mate selection suggest that human males should
seek partners featured by youth and high fertility. However, females
should be more sensitive to resources that can be invested on themselves
and their offspring. Previous studies indicate that economic status is
indeed important in male attractiveness. However, no previous study has
quantified and compared the impact of equivalent resources on male and
female attractiveness. Annual salary is a direct way to evaluate
economic status. Here, we combined images of male and female body shape
with information on annual salary to elucidate the influence of economic
status on the attractiveness ratings by opposite sex raters in
American, Chinese and European populations. We found that ratings of
attractiveness were around 1000 times more sensitive to salary for
females rating males, compared to males rating females. These results
indicate that higher economic status can offset lower physical attractiveness
in men much more easily than in women. Neither raters' BMI nor age
influenced this effect for females rating male attractiveness. This
difference explains many features of human mating behavior and may pose a barrier for male engagement in low-consumption lifestyles.
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