Men who earn less than their female partner are more likely to cheat on her, a study found.
Cheating may be a man’s way of trying to restore his gender identity
when he feels it is under threat, Christin Munsch, a sociology doctorate
candidate at Cornell University, says in the study, which she authored
and presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological
Association.
“Making less money than a female partner may threaten men’s gender
identity by calling into question the traditional notion of men as
breadwinners,” said the study’s author Christin Munsch, a sociology
doctorate candidate at Cornell University.
“This relationship may be particularly strong for certain subgroups
of the population that highly value traditional masculinity, like Latino
men,” she added.
Indeed, the study found that infidelity dramatically increased when
the man earning less than his female partner is Latino, probably because
breadwinner status is “one of the defining features of Hispanic
masculinity.”
Then again, the same study found that men whose partners were more
dependent on them were also more likely to cheat, making it a lose-lose
situation for women.
It’s different for girls, though.
If a woman is the main breadwinner in the family, she’s more likely
to cheat — it would seem that relationships where women earn more than
men really are doomed — and if she depends on her male partner for
money, then she is less likely to cheat.
Overall, women are half as likely to cheat as men anyway, whatever the circumstances, the study found.
“Women’s femininity is not defined by their breadwinner status, nor
is it defined by sexual conquest. Therefore, economic dependency does
not serve as a threat to women,” Munsch says.
“Rather, given the sexual double standard, it is likely that, for women, economic dependency leads women to be more faithful.”
The study indicates ways to prevent one’s partner cheating without giving up the well-paid day job.
Munsch analyzed data on 1,024 men and 1,559 women who were married or
living with a partner for at least a year for the study, which also
found that, for whatever reason, men were around twice as likely as
women to be unfaithful — 6.7 percent of men cheated in a six-year period
versus 3.3 percent of women.
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