The Cost of the Man Box: A study on the economic impacts of harmful masculine stereotypes in the US, UK, and Mexico

The Cost of the Man Box: A study on the economic impacts of harmful masculine stereotypes in the US, UK, and Mexico, a new summary report from Promundo and AXE, Unilever’s leading male grooming brand, reveals that “man up” stereotypes—and the harmful behaviors they lead to—cost the United States, the United Kingdom, and Mexico billions each year.

The Man Box study in 2017 highlighted the prevalence of harmful ideas about manhood and their impact in the United States (US), United Kingdom (UK), and Mexico. The results showed that young men (ages 18-30) feel pressured to live up to a restrictive set of “act tough” expectations that cause real harm to those around them and to themselves. The findings from The Man Box study were so strong, consistent, and alarming that Promundo and Axe partnered again to estimate the economic costs of harmful ideas about masculinity, in order to drive change. The Cost of the Man Box estimates a minimum cost of $20.9 billion that could be saved by the US, UK, and Mexican economy if there were no “Man Box.”

The study presents six key outcomes or consequences, as identified by The Man Box, which show strong statistical links to harmful masculine stereotypes and have measurable societal and economic costs. These include: traffic accidents, suicide, depression, sexual violence, bullying and violence, and binge drinking. The study draws from available public health data to estimate the total nationwide prevalence of each of these six outcomes or consequences, and then uses a range of methodologies to approximate the costs associated with these outcomes. The costs of the Man Box are massive, and this study only provides an initial, minimum estimate.