Men Who Drive Flashy Cars Viewed as Less Suitable Long-Term Partners
Flaunting
your wealth is seen as a sign of promiscuity
Women
perceive men who flaunt their wealth as unsuitable partners for a long-term
relationship, a new study suggests.
US
researchers from the University of Buffalo have revealed that ostentatious
displays, such as driving a flashy car, could be detrimental when it comes to
finding a potential partner.
This, they
say, is because people who drive extravagant vehicles are viewed as less
reliable and more sexually promiscuous.
Men Who Drive Flashy Cars Less Attractive to Women Looking for Serious Relationships, Study Finds
The study,
published in Springer’s journal Evolutionary Psychological Science, asked
375 undergraduate students to complete anonymous online surveys in a bid
to investigate how others interpret a man’s display of wealth.
The
participants first read through the descriptions of two men who were
purchasing cars and were asked to rate each character on dating and parenting
behaviours, his interest in relationships and his attractiveness to others.
Both
fictional men spent the same budget but, while one man made a frugal investment,
the other opted for a car with new paint, larger wheels and an impressive sound
system.
The results
showed that both male and female participants rated the man with the flashy car
as being more interested in brief sexual relationships and did not tick the
boxes for a long-term committed partner.
Interestingly,
the man who made the frugal car purchase scored much higher and also received
top marks as a potential life partner, parent and provider.
“Participants
demonstrated an intuitive understanding that men investing in the display of
goods featuring exaggerated sensory properties have reproductive strategies
with higher mating effort and greater interest in short-term sexual
relationships as well as lower paternal investment and interest in
long-term committed romantic relationships than men investing in practical
considerations,” explains Daniel Kruger, lead author of the study.
Jessica
Kruger, co-author added: “This contrasts with the notion that men's conspicuous
resource displays are attractive to women because they reliably signal expected
future resource investment in partners and especially in offspring.”
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