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Marriage rates in the U.S. have hit an historic low.
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Annual revenue of the online dating industry is at an all-time high. $1.049 Billion.
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Ever wonder if romantic relationships are getting increasingly more difficult to navigate these days?
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Why fewer couples are getting married and later than ever before?
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Time for a crash course on the Economics of Sex.
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Let’s think about sex as an exchange where each person gives the other person something of themselves.
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It might appear at face value that they are giving the same thing - - intimate
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access to each other’s bodies - - but there’s more going on here than meets the eye.
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Men and Women both enjoy sex. We all know that. But what’s interesting is how the data tells us that men and women experience sex differently.
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On average, Men have a higher sex drive than women. Blame it on testosterone, call it whatever
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you want--but on average, men initiate sex more than women, they're more sexually permissive
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than women, and they connect sex to romance less often than women. Nobody’s saying this
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is the way it ought to be. It’s just the way it is.
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Women, on the other hand, are likely to have sex for reasons beyond just simple pleasure.
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Her motivations for sex often include expressing and receiving love, strengthening commitment, affirming desirability, and relationship security.
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So in an exchange relationship where men want sex more often than women do who decides when it will happen?
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She does, of course. Sex is her resource.
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Sex in consensual relationships will happen when women want it to.
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So how do women decide to begin a sexual relationship?
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Pricing. Women have something of value that men want…badly, something men are actually willing to sacrifice for.
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So how much does sex cost for men?
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It might cost him nothing but a few drinks and compliments, or a month of dates and respectful attention,
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or all the way up to a lifetime promise to share all of his affections, wealth and earnings with her exclusively.
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The “price” varies widely. But if women are the gatekeepers, why don’t very many women “charge more” so to speak?
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Because pricing is not entirely up to women.
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The “market value” of sex is part of a social system of exchange, an “economy” if you will,
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where men and women learn from each other – and from others – what they ought to expect from each other sexually.
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So sex is not entirely a private matter between two consenting adults.
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Think of it as basic..Supply and Demand.
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When supplies are high prices drop, since people won’t pay more for something that’s easy to find.
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But if it’s hard to find, people will pay a premium.
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And the same rings true with sex. Men know that sex is cheap these days, if they know where to look.
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So how did we get here? How did the market value of sex decline so drastically?
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Economists often speak of “technological shocks” that dramatically alter markets.
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Take pesticides for example…
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Pesticides revolutionized agriculture, enabling its mass production on a level unparalleled in the history of human civilization.
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Lawns became greener. Produce became better, and
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widely available with a marvelous variety. We eat like kings now.
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And the market has changed ... forever.
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Here’s another example: Artificial hormonal contraception or The Pill, allowed men and women to have sex while avoiding pregnancy.
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This was a technological shock that forever altered the mating market, by profoundly lowering the cost of sex.
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It didn’t change overnight, but the effects have been … one might say… revolutionary.
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Before contraception, sex before marriage took place during the search for a mate- someone to marry.
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Sex didn’t necessarily mean marriage, but serious commitment was commonly a requirement for sex.
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Sex was oriented towards marriage.
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Don’t believe people who say your great-grandparents were secretly as casual about sex as your friends are. They weren’t,
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because to mess around with sex eventually meant, well, becoming parents.
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Now...remember the example of “pesticides?” It turns out that they had unforeseen effects
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that are wreaking havoc on the environment and weakening the natural ecological systems that we depend on.
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Scientists believe that because of pesticides, the bee population is dropping at an alarming rate.
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One-third of all the food we eat depends on those bees for pollination.
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And that’s just one example. It is now feared that the overuse of pesticides is throwing ecology as we know it into disarray.
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While the original purpose of the Pill was to prevent pregnancy, the data reveals an unanticipated side-effect:
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the Pill threw the mating market into disarray.
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Having sex and thinking about marriage have now become two quite different things.
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We now have a split mating market:
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One corner where people are largely interested in sex and one corner where people are largely pursuing marriage.
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And there are more men looking for sex than women, and more women looking to marry than men.
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The language of online dating reinforces the reality of this split mating market.
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Men are more apt to write that they’re “looking for fun,” while women tend to signal very
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different things, saying things like “only serious inquiries, please” or “not into games.”
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So this split mating market poses a particular problem for women.
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They certainly call the shots when it comes to short-term sexual relationships because men outnumber them.
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This enables women to be more selective in the short-term. But the reverse is true when they decide they want to settle down.
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We often hear about “men’s lack of commitment,” but the blunt reality is an economic one:
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Women vastly outnumber men in the "marriage market" which means men can be picky and can insist on extensive sexual experience before committing.
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Men are in a position to maximize their rewards while investing fewer resources.
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Why do men do this? Because they can. Here’s the thing:
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In the past, it really wasn’t the patriarchy that policed women’s relational interests. It was women.
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But, this agreement, this unspoken pact to set a high market value of sex …
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has all but vanished.
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But in a brave new world where having sex no longer means babies and marriage has become optional,
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the solidarity women once felt toward each other in the mating market…has dissolved.
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Women no longer have each other’s backs, on the contrary…
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they’re now each other’s competition.
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And when women compete for men, they tend to do so by appealing to what men want.
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Here’s where women are wrong about men:
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Men are not actually afraid of commitment at all. While women are the gatekeepers when it comes to sex,
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the deal is that men are in the driver’s seat in the marriage market.
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They can navigate it in exactly how they want to. And unlike women’s fertility, men’s
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virility doesn’t expire by 40, or 45, or 50, or even 60. So what’s the rush?
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Talk about having the upper hand! So... it should come as no surprise that
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the average age of first marriage in the United States continues to rise,
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and that the share of Americans between the ages of 25-34 years old who are married is continuing to drop.
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While there are certainly factors that contribute to each of those trends, the gender imbalance in a split mating market is a big one.
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Talk about a profound irony: by nearly every measure, young men are failing to adapt to contemporary life.
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When attractive women will still go to bed with you, life for young men
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—even those who are floundering—just ain’t so bad.
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In reality, men tend to behave as well or as poorly as the women in their lives permit.
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Economists say that collusion—women working together—would be the most rational way to elevate the “market value” of sex.
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But there is little evidence of this happening among women today.
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At least, not yet…
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If women were squarely in charge of how their relationships transpired and demanded a “higher market price” for the exchange of sex so to speak,
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we’d be seeing—on average—
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more impressive wooing efforts, greater male investment, longer relationships, fewer premarital partners,
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shorter cohabitations, and more marrying going on.
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For a woman to know what she wants in a relationship and to signal it clearly,
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especially if it’s different than what most men want … This is her power in the economy.
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But none of these things seem to be occurring … not now… at least…
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Today, the economics of contemporary sexual relationships clearly favor men and what they
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want, even while what they are offering in the exchange has diminished.
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And it’s all thanks to supply, demand, and the long reach of a remarkable little pill.
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Brought to you by the Austin Institute for the Study of Family and Culture.