No Stupid Questions - 138. Why is Everyone Having Less Sex?
Episode Date: March 19, 2023Are we too busy watching Friends? Is porn driving us apart? And why did New Yorkers stop vacationing in the Catskills?Take the Seven Deadly Sins survey: freakonomics.com/nsq-sins/Â ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We're animals.
Haven't you ever heard of Darwin?
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, why are we having less sex than we used to?
I think even masturbation is down.
I don't have that number handy.
I'm sorry.
Sorry.
So, Angela, this is the third episode of our Seven Deadly Sins series.
We're approaching the so-called sins in the order we chose, not the way the Catholic Church listed them. We started with sloth, then we solved gluttony, and now it's time for everyone's favorite of the seven deadly sins, which is lust.
It is a favorite.
I've read in a variety of sources that in the U.S., but many, many other countries as well, people are just having less sex, period, full stop.
I'm curious why you think that is based on your knowledge of the psychological research,
based on this project you are working on now, this new book about self-control.
And I'm especially curious whether you think the decline in sex may be due to the easier availability of substitutes for sex, including pornography, or whether maybe something totally
different is going on?
I have been thinking about this for a little while because I was thinking about things that
changed during the pandemic that might still be with us, you know, with social distancing and
quarantining. But it turns out, I think most of the research was done actually before the pandemic.
So you don't need to have a pandemic to stop having sex.
I'm thinking about one paper by Jean Twenge called
Declines in Sexual Frequency Among American Adults, 1989 to 2014,
clearly before the pandemic.
If this is a secular trend, as it's called,
a trend that extends for an entire population over years,
it might actually say something more general about
the way we live today. In the paper that I just mentioned, the conclusion is that the decline
was not linked to longer working hours or increased pornography use. But I do wonder about
porn as a substitute good for sex and even just for intimacy, like a romantic relationship with another human being.
So much to discuss and unpack here.
So much to undress here, so to speak.
I'm reading from the Twenge study.
After they write that it does not appear that if you measure inputs of pornography or longer work hours, that
those are what's driving the lower sexual frequency.
They do say possible reasons that may account for the decrease are the increase in entertainment
options like social media and video streaming and the increase in depression.
I've also read elsewhere that pharmaceuticals that are meant to treat depression,
anxiety, etc. may decrease sex drive. I do know that when you're in a depressed state,
there's this feature, anhedonia, the inability to experience pleasure from food or from music
or for the sorts of things that you used to take pleasure in. So that, to me, would be probably
at least part of the story. You're depressed or you're anxious. You don't feel like having intercourse. These
authors have a good point that when I think what's crowding out actual sex, I think porn,
but just being on Facebook for hours or watching old episodes of Friends, you know, that also could crowd it out because it's just occupying
your time and also maybe feeding your desire for social connection. So anyway, it's not just porn
that could be crowding out sex. I do remember reading years ago about a paper, and I think
the paper was disputed to some degree, but the paper argued that the increase in the availability
of pornography did help reduce sexual assault crimes.
Oh, interesting, because it was a substitute good?
Yeah, that's an argument.
And then, you know, economists do like to talk about substitute goods generally.
They love talking about substitute goods.
There is this research study that was published in 2016.
It's called Pornography and the Male Sexual Script, an Analysis of Consumption and
Sexual Relations. And it's from the Archives of Sexual Behavior. And what these authors suggest
is that actually what pornography gives you is a script for what sex is supposed to be.
They call this cognitive script theory. You watch these things, you're like, oh,
that's what it's supposed to look like. That's what I'm supposed to feel. And I can imagine how that could be true, especially because sex is something that you don't get to watch a lot of people do in general.
Speak for yourself. I've got a telescope. I live in New York City. It's, you know, windows just all over.
Windows just all over.
Maybe outside of New York.
Anyway, what they go on to say, these authors, and I'll quote them directly,
cognitive script theory argues the more a user watches a particular media script, the more embedded those codes of behavior become in their worldview.
And the more likely they are to use those scripts to act upon real-life experiences.
Then they go on to say that they surveyed close to 500 college men.
These are young men aged 18 to 29, all in the United States.
Wow, that's kind of old to be in college, isn't it?
Well, I will say most students don't graduate in four years from four-year schools.
They stretch it out.
So anyway, they ask them questions about the rate at which they use pornography,
and they ask them about their sexual preferences and their concerns. to conjure images of pornography during sex to maintain arousal,
have concerns about his performance and body image from those scripts that he saw.
So the study had one other finding that I think is worth thinking about,
even though it's just one survey study.
Higher pornography use was negatively associated with enjoying sexually intimate behaviors with a partner.
So not a pretty picture of porn. I'm reading here something that I think is related to the paper that you're
describing. Debbie Herbenick, the principal investigator of the National Survey of Sexual
Health and Behavior, says that increases in rough sex may be contributing to declines in overall sex.
The thinking being that for sexually active people under 30, there's been an increase
in consensual choking and strangling during sex, which I gather, although it doesn't say
it right here, is derived from the consumption of pornography.
That's the behavior that's modeled and which may frighten some people and cause them
to opt out. In other words, the model of sex portrayed in some pornography is a model of sex
that people see and say, oh, I'd rather have zero sex, not for me. So there was another example
having nothing to do with pornography or sex that showed that violence declined during the periods where violent movies were debuting.
The idea being that either the people who might be shooting other people are actually watching
the violent movie at the times that are too busy to go shoot people, or it could be that it does
serve as a substitute. Do you happen to know whether in the long term,
violent movies, violent video games increases or decreases violence in a society?
I have read a lot of research on this topic, going back to the invention of TV, because if you think about it, TV came along not too long before a really,
really big crime spike in the US. I did not know that. What decade are we in? I have no idea when TV was invented.
The year that pops into my mind is 1948, but it was more gradual in that
it appeared in some places and some doses, but then it started getting more and more popular.
Certainly by the 50s, it was almost universally popular in the United States.
And then the crime spike really began to happen in the 1960s. And there
were many, many, many potential inputs to that rising crime. But one theory was that television
presented a set of behaviors that might encourage crime. And then there were others that argued
exactly the opposite. But in terms of your overarching question, I think it is yet to be answered
satisfactorily. That is interesting. I mean, I do want to say this as a psychologist,
human beings are always learning vicariously more than any other animal. We learn by watching what
other people do. So which way does the causal arrow go? How big is the causal arrow? I don't
know. But it is true that we internalize
and we compare all the time when we watch other people.
If you just think about the last hundred years,
just in the United States,
the way that sexual norms have changed is really remarkable.
Between 2009, 2018, the proportion of adolescents
reporting no sexual activity,
either alone or with partners,
rose from 28.8% to 44.2%
among young men and from 49.5% to 74% among young women.
That's a massive decline in recent years.
That, however, is an exact opposite of what happened 50, 60, 70 years earlier.
We wrote about this a little bit in
Super Freakonomics. We were writing about prostitution, actually, as a sort of industry
that we studied from the economic and social perspectives. If you look back to the middle
of the 20th century, it turns out that among men who were born between 1933 and 1942, at least 20%
of them, the first time they had sexual intercourse,
it was with a prostitute. So one out of five men born in that period, their first sexual
intercourse was with a prostitute. The argument being that there wasn't as much sex available
from non-prostitutes as there would be later. Now, if you think about the same man 20 years later, born in, let's say,
the 50s or 60s, the shift in sexual mores created a big change in what you might call a supply of
unpaid sex, consensual sex that may have happened before marriage or outside of marriage. And in
that generation, only 5% of men lost their virginity to a prostitute. And it's not that people are
having less sex. In fact, let's see, more than 70% of the men in his generation had sex before
they married compared to just 33% in the earlier generation. But then in the last couple decades,
we see this big drop. I do wonder if it could be that more and more people in the last 30 years have come to
think that what used to be called casual sex, just sex for the sake of sex and having fun.
I wonder if just more and more people, men and women, have come to think that that's not a good
idea. That may be true, but I believe the statistics also show that sex within married
couples is up. No, it's down. I think the data suggests that
married couples are having less sex than they used to. Everybody's having less sex,
but the share of people having sex within marriage is higher relative to the share of
people having sex outside of marriage than it used to be. Totally agree. But I'm just saying,
like, think of your married friends. Statistically, on average, they're having less sex than married
people did X number of years ago, which to me was surprising. And I think even masturbation is down.
I don't have that number handy. I'm sorry. Let me get the findings, this is a survey of teenagers, was that
adolescents are reporting less. I think the technical term is solo masturbation. There might
be other kinds. So that may be among adolescents. I'm looking at something here that says from 1992
to 2014, the share of American men who reported masturbating in a given week doubled to 54 percent.
And the share of women more than tripled, but from a low base to 26 percent.
It could be teens versus adults.
Who knows?
But we do know that these trends in who is having sex, how much sex are they having, et cetera, things are shifting, right?
I have to say when I grew up and even when I was in college, I was a bio major.
Bio majors have so much sex, I understand.
Oh, on the contrary, Stephen.
I mean, it's homework, really.
Think pre-med. Does that help?
Yeah, not very exciting lives being lived.
But I remember thinking intuitively that there are so many hardwired things
about an animal, including a person.
So the kind of trends that we're talking about and frankly, the plurality of gender identities and so forth.
I think the lesson it's taught me is that, wow, there is a lot more plasticity.
There's a lot more shaping from culture, society and norms, the way we think about things, than I would have expected.
Like, I don't know that I would have believed these trends about sex going down and, you know,
people going on social media instead of having intercourse with each other. I was like, oh,
are you kidding? We're animals. Haven't you ever heard of Darwin? But people change or society
changes. I want to go back to the piece of society changing that I talked about before,
what's sometimes called the sexual revolution or the embrace among many people, at least of what was called casual sex. I think it may be that more and more people would decide that it's not a good idea because sex is such an intense and intimate experience that it shouldn't be reduced to what you might call a
casual interaction. It's just more meaningful than that, whether it's inside or outside of
relationship. And it's almost as if the sexual revolution for both men and women decoupled sex
from love and that the past decade or two, we may have seen more of a conscious recoupling,
if you will.
Just a theory.
I have no idea if that's true.
I also wonder if we look at the baseline numbers of the decline in sexual activity, when sex
in a bad form is in the news so much for so long with the Catholic Church scandal, with
so many instances of sexual abuse and harassment, including the
Me Too movement, but well, well, well before that. I wonder if to some degree it's given sex a bad
name, made it seem as if it's usually nasty or unnatural and an activity that's, you know,
almost inherently based in conflict or inequity. And if that's the case, personally, I think that's a shame.
My husband Jason sent me an op-ed from the New York Times that was published, I think, the day before Valentine's Day. The title is some version of have more sex, please.
And the perspective offered, provocative, is that we should be having more sex and
feel free to disagree because I take your point about the recoupling between sex and love
and that it's not just a physical urge. But the argument was made, I think, persuasively that
when you have this most intimate of relations with a real person, like we're not living just
by watching flickering images on our phone vicariously, then it's hard to think of an activity which is more like in the here and now, real.
It's not the metaverse, and the recoupling isn't necessarily at odds with that.
I mean, one of the arguments that's made in this op-ed is more broadly than sex,
this might be a leading indicator of American loneliness.
We're more and more staring at our phones, swiping, scrolling, but we're more and more
isolated from each other. So you can think of sexual relations as being like the extreme,
as being like really not completely by yourself. I did find that compelling. I do worry about people
like being in their apartments, having their food delivered, being on their phone, watching other
people have adventures or dramas, and being increasingly disconnected. It's like a version of the bowling alone theory
from the sociologist Robert Putnam.
Sexing alone.
The bowling alone book was about how bowling leagues were going down and solo bowling was
going up. That was written how many years ago? At least 15 or 20?
I think there's an interesting parallel you bring up here. First of all, I don't think
many people actually go bowling alone. I think they choose to not bowl.
Yes, that's true.
I love the title.
It's a great title.
I see very few people bowling alone. I think they just do activities other than bowling. But
his argument is that social trust is the glue that keeps a society healthy,
His argument is that social trust is the glue that keeps a society healthy and that by doing more and more things on our own. I mean, another example I think of is back in the old days, like the early middle 20th century, people from New York City, when they scraped up enough money to get out of the city for the summer, they would go to these cabin resorts or hotels in the Catskills. My mom was a waitress at one of those, by the way. Oh, no kidding. Yeah. And that was a very big community social thing. Now, people who have the means, they tend to go to their own little vacation home. And I think about that a lot, the way that we've chosen to diminish our circles. And I think there are some benefits to that. People like privacy. People like being with their closest loved ones and choosing who they have dinner with rather than sitting with 12 other people that you may not know.
But Putnam was making the argument that we lose a lot culturally.
We do.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions,
Stephen and Angela discuss the consequences of the decline in sex. From the very beginning, I remember having misgivings about lust being a sin.
Now, back to Stephen and Angela's conversation about lust.
I wonder what you think, Angie, may be the consequences of so much less sex. We should say
some of the effects are plainly positive. The rate of teen pregnancy has gone way, way, way down.
Way down. But the overall fertility rate has also gone down a lot, and that's typically not
a good thing for society. So when you think about the downward trend in
sexual activity, what do you think are the consequences of that? How is it changing us?
I probably worry more about the things that are correlated with sex than I do about sex itself.
Like corned beef or what are you talking about? It's correlated with sex.
Not a side of corned beef.
That's what George Costanza was after. I don't know if you recall. He wanted to
have sex while eating like a pastrami sandwich and watching the Yankees on TV.
That was his sex trifecta.
Oh, I missed that episode.
Yeah, most memorable.
I did not catch that Seinfeld illusion.
Well, I found the op-ed of which I spoke, the one that my husband wrote to me with the subject line,
I like this op-ed for many reasons.
I think he was a little tongue-in-cheek there. Was this his little Valentine's note to you? Like, hey, honey, let's
get it on. Well, yes, it was the day before Valentine's Day. Let's do our patriotic duty.
Maybe so. You know, the title of this op-ed is Have More Sex, Please. And the author is a writer
who covers sex and culture named Magdalene Taylor. And at least according to her, there are numerous physical benefits.
Apparently, you have better sleep.
There is evidence that it lowers blood pressure.
It's good for your heart.
It's a good stress reliever.
But I think about the things that are correlates of having sex that are maybe even more important.
In general, I think the fact that you're having sex with another person suggests that you have some kind of relationship, right?
Like having dinner with somebody.
You're talking to somebody about your day. has been made that maybe the epidemic we should all be worrying about, and maybe one of the worst things about COVID, was loneliness. And not to undermine sickness and death from COVID, but
just the isolation. I mean, I remember, this has nothing to do with sex, but, you know, my father
passed away in April, the first month, at least for the United States, of the COVID-19 pandemic.
And my mother had been living with my father in this nursing home. And not only at his
death, but also for the next two plus years, like couldn't really see her. And because of
quarantine and so forth, my 80-something-year-old mother was just like completely socially isolated.
So I guess I worry more about that kind of thing than the lack of intercourse per se.
Yeah, I think that's a really good point. You know, I would love, Angela, to hear from
listeners, why do you think fewer people are having sex? We've put forth some research-based
assumptions. I put forth a theory that's based in nothing other than thinking and opinion,
but I'm really curious to know why our listeners think fewer people are having sex. So if you have something to contribute that we can maybe play on a later episode,
send us a voice memo. Just use your smartphone to record, record in a nice quiet place.
Keep it relatively short, include your name, and send that to us at nsqatfreakonomics.com.
You know, Angela, I'm thinking now that we have gotten to the end of our third installment of the Seven Deadly Sins series, on Sloth, our first one, we asked whether basically one should be more industrious. And you said yes, and I said not so fast. So we're kind of split on that. On Gluttony, we agreed. We were like, oh my gosh, ultra processed food is horrible. And that we should find ways to consume less.
With lust, it feels like we're both saying that people should just get out there and
have a lot more sex, but presumably be somewhat selective.
Would that be your advice?
Well, I think we're voting for love, right?
Like we're voting for meaningful sex wherever and whenever possible.
You wanted to recouple love with sex. And I'm on
that team. I didn't necessarily say I wanted that. I said that was my theory that maybe would explain
why people are having less sex. But to be fair, I like the idea of recoupling sex and love. I
absolutely do. I think there's been a lot of damage done by the uncoupling. I think there are
massive, really, you know, an economist would call them negative externalities of people pursuing sex for the sake of sex.
I mean, I personally know several people, men, who have ruined lives, their own lives
and lives of their families and other people by the pursuit of sex that they literally
could not control.
And so if what we're seeing is a decline overall in sexual activity because some people have got
that pursuit under control, I think that's a positive step. But I don't think that's driving
the secular trend. I don't think it's like sex addicts are going down and then the whole
population is going down. I will say this from the very beginning. I remember having misgivings
about lust being a sin. I remember in our first conversation now, you said you didn't think that should even
belong in the list of sins.
And I thought, are you bonkers?
Only a woman would say that, by the way, because if you're a man, you've ever been around a
man.
I think maybe there is a gender difference here.
I'm like, well, what impulse are you talking about?
That's so hard.
How could you possibly let that crowd out your desire for coffee or wanting to read a good novel?
But as it turns out, even a lot of men are susceptible to crowding out from video games and social media and movies and so on, apparently.
Apparently so. But nevertheless, when we put this on the scale, when we ask people in focus groups, we did find gender differences on the scale. So we'll
see what happens when we survey No Stupid Questions listeners. But I do think there are many men and
certainly some women as well who would say that the drive to feel these feelings either by yourself
or with other people, it can get you into trouble. And that's the definition, I think, for all of
these sins. Wait, you're saying that you used good academic research dollars, some of which are federally and taxpayer funded,
to conclude that sexual appetite is actually a real thing. Well, that was not the point of the
study. And by the way, no tax dollars at work. Amazing finding down there at University of
Pennsylvania. Good work. No, that was not the point of the study. But my point is that when
you do focus groups, people say just spontaneously, like, this is a problem for me because we ask them about their own lives. linked in the show notes of this episode. It is also on the No Stupid Questions website. The link there will take you to a University of Pennsylvania site where Angie is presenting
this survey for anybody to take so you can really learn about yourselves.
It's not for research. It's just for you. And the last items, none of them are X-rated. I don't
even think any of them are R-rated. So, Angela, has this conversation today made you lustful?
Are you going to run home and have sex with Jason?
I refuse to answer that question.
Really?
On the grounds that it may agree with your sentiment?
Yeah, exactly.
It was like, am I taking the fifth?
Happy late Valentine's Day, then.
I will say this.
I'm really glad I married Jason Duckworth.
This episode of No Stupid Questions was produced by me, Catherine Moncure, with our production associate, Lyric Bowditch.
And now, here's a fact check of today's conversation.
In the first part of the episode, Stephen says he thinks the TV was invented sometime around 1948.
The TV was actually first demonstrated in public in 1927 by Scottish engineer John Baird.
Then, Stephen says that married people have more sex than singles and that the gap has grown over
time. But Gene Twenge's 2017 paper, Declines in Sexual Frequency Among American Adults,
1989-2014, says that the quote-unquote marriage advantage has shrunk over time, not grown.
Finally, Stephen says that Seinfeld character George Costanza's quote-unquote sex trifecta
is having sex while eating a pastrami sandwich and watching the Yankees on TV.
While George's trifecta does include sex, pastrami, and TV, he doesn't say anything
about the Yankees. That's it for the fact
check. Before we wrap today's show, let's hear some of your thoughts about last week's episode,
in which Stephen and Angela tackled the sin of gluttony with a discussion of processed food.
Hello, Stephen and Angela. This is Gideon from New York. One of the ways I have discovered to
control excess is to apply some of the dietary
principles of Ayurveda, the ancient Indian science of health and longevity. Ayurveda recognizes that
we need all six tastes, sweet, sour, salty, bitter, astringent, and pungent to be represented in a meal
in order for us to feel sated. I would suggest that if more Americans tried to incorporate
all six tastes in a given meal, they would feel truly sated. After all, processed foods have
mostly one or two tastes, typically sweet and salty. Hi, Angela and Stephen. My name is Mike
Foley, and I live in Richmond, Virginia, and I love all things processed. There's some really
good food out there and would ask you to consider the tater tot.
Yummy.
Thanks for the show.
That was, respectively, Gideon Etra and Mike Foley.
Thanks so much to them
and to everyone who sent us their thoughts.
And remember, we'd still love to hear
why you think people are having less sex these days.
Send a voice memo to nsq at freakonomics.com. Let us
know your name and whether you'd like to remain anonymous. You might hear your voice on the show.
Coming up next week on No Stupid Questions, Stephen and Angela discuss the power of wrath.
I was so mad that I ripped apart the turkey sandwich covered in mayo and everything, and I just
flung it into all corners
of the room. That's next week
on No Stupid Questions.
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