A new study finds that men in
particular are much more likely to cheat if their wives are bringing in all the
family's income.
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Husbands and wives are more likely to cheat if they depend on spouse for
money. Especially husbands.
If a man lives off his wife's
income, there's a 15% chance he'll cheat on her, study says
Being the main breadwinner in a
marriage may not earn you as much gratitude as you'd hope --
especially if you're a woman, according to a new study.
After analyzing interviews with more
than 2,750 married people, sociologist Christin Munsch found that for both
men and women, the more financially dependent they are on a spouse,
the more likely they are to cheat on them.
That's right. It's the person
who is NOT bringing home the bacon who is more likely to be messing around on
the sly.
LA Times reports:
"People don't like to be in
uneven relationships," said Munsch, who teaches sociology at the
University of Connecticut. "It particularly doesn't feel good to be on the
losing end of it."
Munsch's research shows that in any
given year there is a 5% chance that a woman who is 100% financially dependent
on her husband will be cheating on him.
For a man who lives off his wife's
income, however, there is a 15% chance that he will have an affair.
When both halves of a couple
contribute equally to the family's total income there is less than a 4% chance
that either party will be unfaithful, Munsch found.
"This suggests that there is
something about inequity in relationships that people don't like, and something
about not being the breadwinner that men especially don't like," she said.
In the paper, she argues that men
who are not earning money may feel emasculated and that taking on an
extramarital affair may make them feel more manly and desirable.
Her research also shows
that women are least likely to cheat on their husbands when they are the
sole breadwinner of the family. However, men are least likely to have an affair
when they bring in 70% of the income. After that, the likelihood of a man
having an affair rises gradually to 4% if he makes 100% of the money.
"My study is not an argument
that men should make all the money and women should stay home," she said.
"It is better for the relationship when both people feel like they are
contributing."
The research was published in the
June issue of the American Sociological Review, and it is based on data
collected from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth.
It should be noted that the people
in the study were between the ages of 18 and 32, so the findings may be more
relevant for young people in marriages.
Because Munsch was using previously
collected data, she was not able to ask respondents how much free time they had
on their hands. But she was able to control for how much time they spent
working in an average week.
She said that men who earned less than their
wives were just as likely to cheat on them no matter how much time the man
spent in the workforce.
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