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  • What do you think?

    This report didn't surprise me, but it does make me sad for the state of women in our society. What do you think?



    Families of fat women face slimmer pay



    Heavy-set women are likely to face worse socioeconomic outcomes than slimmer colleagues, but fat men do just fine, a new research study has found.

    "Body mass significantly decreases women's family income," the study by two researchers at New York University found. "However ... men experience no negative effects of body mass on economic outcomes."

    Dalton Conley, director of NYU's Center for Advanced Social Science Research, and NYU graduate student Rebecca Glauber found that a 1 percent increase in a woman's body mass index -- a measure of weight relative to height -- pushes family income down by about 0.6 percent.

    Similarly, the researchers found a woman's "occupational prestige," a measure of the social status of differing jobs, also dropped as body mass rose, although to a somewhat lesser degree: 0.4 percent for each 1 percent increase in body mass.

    Conley said the marriage market appeared to account for most of the differences in body mass-related outcomes among women.

    "Women who are heavier for their height tend to have lower chances of getting married in the first place. If they do get married they tend to marry spouses who have less earning power and they also have a higher likelihood of getting divorced," he said. "All those three factors reduce their total family income."

    Conley and Glauber also found that the conventional wisdom that tall men were more successful than shorter men did not hold true. "The talk is that height for men is what slimness is for woman, but it turns out there is absolutely no effect," Conley said.

    The study, which was recently posted to the Web site of the prestigious National Bureau of Economic Research, did not definitively rule out the possibility that a lower socioeconomic position to begin with might lead to a high body mass reading.

    But Conley said the research, which compared outcomes between sisters and between brothers, suggested this was unlikely.

    As for men, body mass appeared to have little impact.

    "Body mass does not reduce their economic status outcomes, it does not reduce their likelihood of marriage, and it does not increase their likelihood of divorce, separation, or widowhood," the researchers wrote.

    Angie
    Gyn-Onc fellowship survivor - 10 years out of the training years; reluctant suburbanite
    Mom to DS (18) and DD (15) (and many many pets)

    "Where are we going - and what am I doing in this handbasket?"

  • #2
    I can see being overweight in the job situation, but that's about it. Given two candidates with identical skills and similar personalities, a lot of employers would hire the slimmer one simply because being heavy is perceived as being lazy. It may not be as apparent for men because men earn 30% more than women, but I'm sure it hits them too.


    The marriage thing doesn't make sense, because most women put on weight after they marry/have kids ime. Also, as for the income thing, obesity is linked to high starch, low fruit and veggie consumption as well as lack of exercise. How many rich people do you see eating ramen noodles and hamburger helper? How many poor people belong to a gym or live in a neighborhood good for walking?

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    • #3
      Obesity is the last acceptable prejudice in this country.

      Kelly
      In my dreams I run with the Kenyans.

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      • #4
        What's weird about this is that men didn't suffer from the same social/economic affects of obesity that women did.

        I have read about a study where researchers put pictures of people of varying levels of physical attraction in front of babies and gauged the babies' responses. They found that the babies were actually much more likely to stare at the "more attractive" women for a much longer period of time and have more positive responses than towards the pics of the "less attractive" women. Can't explain why - just a weird study I remember reading about.

        Jennifer
        Who uses a machete to cut through red tape
        With fingernails that shine like justice
        And a voice that is dark like tinted glass

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