Personal Finance
Men Shop to Treat Themselves Just as Much as Women — and Spend More Doing It
The idea that women are shopaholics is an old stereotype — there’s even a lipstick index, a financial indicator that uses cosmetics sales to analyze the U.S. economic outlook.
New research, however, suggests that a “bourbon barometer” may be just as good a way to measure consumer spending. It turns out that men are not only statistically just as likely to splurge as women, they actually spend more money on average when they treat themselves.
Deloitte Insights surveyed consumers in 23 countries about their spending habits, compiling a database of roughly 150,000 splurge purchases with details on what respondents bought, how much they spent and why they made the purchase.
Treat yourself right with a Savings Account
Save for those special days with the help of a High-Yield Savings Account. Click on your state below to get started.
Open an Account
What the data says
-
Gender stereotypes be damned: Men are splurging just as often as women, and when they do, they’re spending almost 40% more worldwide and in the U.S. on a variety of purchases.
-
Overall, women around the world who said they splurged on themselves in the past month spent an average of $28 on their splurge, while men spent $39.
-
Millennial men are especially subscribing to the “treat yoself” way of life. Deloitte found that their median splurge was $53, which is about $20 more than their women counterparts.
-
In fact, men account for more than half (57%) of global splurges in food and drinks.
The takeaway
Deloitte’s data shows that today, splurging doesn’t always look like Cher Horowitz leaving the store with her arms stacked with shopping bags. Instead, picture a man treating himself to a steak dinner and a bottle of Maker’s Mark.
Times are hard — and everyone, regardless of gender, wants a break now and then.
“Whether it’s called the lipstick index or the bourbon barometer, one constant is that consumers generally relieve the pressures of frugality by occasionally treating themselves,” the report reads.
More from Money:
The 3 Best Money Moves to Make This May
The Fed Meeting and New Jobs Data Will Likely Drive Stocks in the Week Ahead
25 Internships That Pay $7,000 a Month or Higher
© Copyright 2023 Money Group, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
This article originally appeared on Money.com and may contain affiliate links for which Money receives compensation. Opinions expressed in this article are the author’s alone, not those of a third-party entity, and have not been reviewed, approved, or otherwise endorsed. Offers may be subject to change without notice. For more information, read Money’s full disclaimer.
Read the full article here
-
Side Hustles5 days ago
The DOJ Reportedly Wants Google to Sell Its Chrome Browser
-
Side Hustles5 days ago
How to Create a Unique Value Proposition (With Tips & Examples)
-
Investing6 days ago
This Founder Turned a Hangover Cure into Millions
-
Investing4 days ago
Are You Missing These Hidden Warning Signs When Hiring?
-
Make Money4 days ago
7 Common Things You Should Never Buy New
-
Investing4 days ago
Google faces call from DuckDuckGo for new EU probes into tech rule compliance By Reuters
-
Passive Income5 days ago
How AI Can (and Should) Drive Innovation Across Your Entire Company
-
Investing5 days ago
Barbara Corcoran, Lori Greiner Differ on ‘Quiet Vacationing’