Scottish Daily Mail

Househusba­nds ‘more likely to have an affair’

- By Fiona MacRae Science Correspond­ent

MEN who are financiall­y dependent on their spouses are more likely to be unfaithful, research has found.

And the greater the earning gap, the more likely they are to have an affair – with those who rely on their wives for all their income the biggest cheats.

In contrast, those high-earning women are the least likely of all to stray.

The researcher­s say that a man who is greatly out- earned by his wife may have affairs as a way of proving his masculinit­y. In contrast, a woman who is the main breadwinne­r may make extra effort to keep her marriage on track.

The findings come from the results of a US survey of more than 2,750 young married people. It revealed that both sexes are more likely to cheat on their spouses the more economical­ly dependent they become on them.

However, a househusba­nd has far greater odds of having an affair than a stay-at-home wife. In the average year, there is a 5 per cent chance that such a woman will cheat – compared with the 15 per cent chance that her male equivalent will be unfaithful.

University of Connecticu­t researcher Christine Munsch said: ‘Extramarit­al sex allows men undergoing a masculinit­y threat – that is not being primary breadwinne­rs, as is culturally expected – to engage in behaviour culturally associated with masculinit­y.’

However, it is not just lack of earnings that gives a man a roving eye.

A man who vastly out- earns his wife is more likely to have an affair than one in which the income is more equally earned.

Dr Munsch said: ‘These men are aware that their wives are truly dependent and may think that, as a result, their wives will not leave them even if they cheat.’

Overall, a man is least likely to cheat when he brings home 70 per cent of a couple’s combined income – meaning he earns roughly twice as much as his wife, the American Sociologic­al review reports. In such a situation the chance of him cheating is just 3 per cent.

‘Threat to their masculinit­y’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom