Gender role attitudes and marital sorting: implications for household inequality

Publication type

Research Paper

Series Number

226/18

Series

IFS Working Paper Series

Authors

Publication date

March 5, 2026

Summary:

We study the role of Gender Role Attitudes (GRA)—beliefs about appropriate roles for men and women—in marital sorting and intra-household allocations. Using the UK Household Longitudinal Study and a multidimensional matching model following Dupuy and Galichon (2014), we estimate the contribution of GRA to the joint marriage utility alongside age, education, BMI, height, health, personality traits, and risk preferences. We find that sorting on GRA is quantitatively important: its contribution to the joint utility is comparable in magnitude to that of education. We apply a decomposition that identifies three main indices underlying the joint utility, with GRA loading heavily on one of the dominant indices jointly with age and education. This GRA-related index strongly predicts subsequent allocations within marriage, including spouses’ shares of housework, childcare, earnings, and paid labour. These findings indicate that GRA are a central dimension of assortative matching and play a meaningful role in shaping intra-household behaviour and gendered labour market outcomes.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1920/wp.ifs.2026.1826

Subjects

#588987

News

Latest findings, new research

Publications search

Search all research by subject and author

Podcasts

Researchers discuss their findings and what they mean for society

Projects

Background and context, methods and data, aims and outputs

Events

Conferences, seminars and workshops

Survey methodology

Specialist research, practice and study

Themes

Key research themes and areas of interest