Inflation slowly but surely destroying not only wallets, but also romantic relationships. Where once there was a place for spontaneity, today there is calculation. Where there was laughter, now they ask the question: “Can we make it through dinner?“
According to recent polls, 43% of young Americans admitted that they began to go on dates less often, 37% – limited intimate relationships, and 33% They directly blame the economy for this. And it’s hard to blame them: in New York, two cocktails and light appetizers can cost more than $100.
Almost half of respondents (44%) admitted that she was changing the format of her dates to save money, and 27% They abandon their plans altogether due to financial difficulties. The price of life has become the measure of love.
Love of convenience – literally
Even those who are already in a relationship admit: they start living together out of need rather than love. One in four study participants said they would speed up cohabitation to share housing costs, bills and groceries.
Psychologists note an alarming trend: romance is turning into a survival strategy. “Today young people talk more about income, professions and the stability of their partner than about feelings”experts explain. “This is not superficiality, this is adaptation to a new reality.”
When even parting is expensive
Financial pressure does not let go even for those who want to leave. More and more divorced and ex-couples continue to live under the same roof – simply because they cannot afford separate housing. Economics holds together what feelings have long since let go of.
Are money and happiness incompatible?
Research published in Personality and Individual Differencesshowed: those who enter into relationships for money feel less satisfaction and more negativity. And publication in British Journal of Social Psychology adds: choosing a partner based on finances destroys emotional well-being in the long run.
Conclusion of psychologists: Economic stability is important, but in matters of the heart it is better to leave profit at the door. After all, love, like happiness, does not fit into Excel.
Modern romance has changed: now it lives on a budget. But, according to experts, it is still possible to find a balance between wallet and feelings – if you do not forget that real intimacy is not measured in dollars.
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