© gpointstudio | Shutterstock.com
When it comes to your wages, do looks matter? A new study says yes.
However, in one aspect of appearance — being well groomed — there was a gender gap, according to the study.
The researchers found that overall, men and women who were considered more attractive earned more money than their less-attractive counterparts, according to the study, published online last month in the journal
Research in Social Stratification and Mobility. But when grooming was factored in for men, the numbers evened out. For women, those who were well-groomed women actually had higher incomes than poorly groomed women, regardless of their "natural" level of attractiveness, the researchers found.
"For both men and women, grooming matters more than attractiveness:
Being attractive is not enough; it is
doing attractiveness appropriately [
being well groomed] that proves one's deservingness and is what gets rewarded in the labor market," the authors of the study, Jaclyn Wong, a Ph.D. student in sociology at the University of Chicago, and Andrew Penner, an associate professor of sociology at the University of California, Irvine, wrote in their paper.
In the study, Wong and Penner analyzed data that were previously gathered on 14,600 adults during the the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, which tracked a nationally representative sample of people from adolescence to adulthood. The participants were in grades 7 to 12 when the study began, in 1994, and were ages 24 to 32 when researchers last followed up with them in 2008.
At several points during the study, the participants sat down for in-depth interviews, and at the end of each interview, the interviewers rated the
attractiveness of the participants as unattractive, average, attractive or very attractive. In addition, the interviewers rated how well groomed they thought the participants were on a similar four-point scale: poorly groomed, average grooming, well groomed or very well groomed.
As adults, the participants provided information about their
yearly incomes, according to the study. (The men reported a yearly income that was, on average, $7,000 greater than that of the women.)
The researchers found that overall, attractive people earned about 20 percent
more money than "average" people.
In addition, when the researchers compared people of the same level of attractiveness to one another, they found that
well-groomed people earned more money than poorly groomed people.
One possible explanation for this effect is that putting effort into one's appearance signals that a person will put effort into other activities, such as his or her job, the researchers said.
The researchers also found that once grooming was taken into consideration, women who were well groomed but unattractive actually earned more money than well-groomed attractive women. This effect was not observed in men.
The findings show that grooming — which requires paying attention to social cues, spending money and conforming to certain social identities — "is the key that provides women with the [benefits] associated with attractiveness," the researchers said.
A
previous study found that spending more time on grooming was linked with higher wages for men in minority groups. That study also suggested that for women, spending more than 90 minutes a day on grooming had a negative effect on wages. Excess grooming could signal that people are focused more on their appearance than on their job, the researchers speculated.
Comment: Self-presentation is an important part of social interaction as well as a reflection of one's inner make-up. How we present ourselves to the world not only has an effect on those we spend time with, but taking the time to look after our appearance increases self-respect and self-confidence due to the fact that looking after ourselves is an act of self-love.