The Free Press Journal

Moms spend more than dads on daughters

Whereas fathers would choose gift for their sons

- AGENCIES

Are you a pampered daddy’s girl or mommy’s boy? If so, then you may be wrong. A recent study has found that a mother would have a high likelihood of buying something for her daughter, while a father would choose a gift for his son.

Researcher­s from Rutgers Business School in New Jersey discovered that most parents unwittingl­y favour the child of the same sex when it comes to spending money. Study author Kristina Durante said the team found that the effect was very robust in four different experiment­s and across cultures.

“The bias toward investing in same-gendered children occurs because women identify more with and see themselves in their daughters, and the same goes for men and sons,” Durante added.

The team recruited participan­ts who had a child of each gender.

The participan­ts were told that they would receive a treasury bond of Dollar 25 for one of their children, and they could choose who received it. The majority of mothers chose to give the bond to their daughters, while the fathers preferred their sons.

To test if the gender bias occurred in a different culture, the researcher­s conducted the experiment among parents from India, and the results were the same. The researcher­s conducted another experiment at a zoo where the participan­ts with a child of each gender were given one raffle ticket after filling out a survey.

They had to decide whether to enter the raffle for a girl’s back-to-school backpack or a boy's backpack. Mothers chose the girl’s backpack 75 percent of the time and fathers picked the boy's backpack 87 percent of the time.

If fathers are in control of the family finances, then sons may be more likely to benefit in the long-run. This unconsciou­s gender bias may also have ramificati­ons far beyond the family, Durante says. The research appears in online Journal of Consumer Psychology.

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