The Baby Boom of the 1940s, combined with the long-held convention of men marrying younger women, created a situation where multiple younger women were available for each man. He attributes the “man deficit” to a number of factors. His research showed that, yes, there are more single, college-educated women than men in the United States, particularly in major cities. What if the hookup culture on today’s college campuses and the wild ways of the big-city singles scene have little to do with changing values and a whole lot to do with lopsided gender ratios that pressure 19-year-old girls to put out and discourage 30-year-old guys from settling down? What if, in other words, the man deficit were real? Having observed a number of attractive, accomplished women struggling to find spouses-a phenomenon many in the church have noticed as well-Birger wondered: So runs the tagline for Date-onomics: How Dating Became a Lopsided Numbers Game, a new book by business journalist Jon Birger. “It’s not that he’s just not that into you-it’s that there aren’t enough of him.”
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