The Cost of Being Gay The Advocate
By John Cloud
October 21, 2008
We all agree that sexual orientation isn’t just
about whom you sleep with but how much of your
identity is tied up in the things you have to buy
(not to mention the price you’re willing to pay for
them).
Let’s begin with a stipulation: It’s difficult to
write about one’s personal spending without seeming
like a snob or a communist, a sybarite or a Spartan.
Some of the things I give money for will surely seem
silly or extravagant to you, and some of the things
I go without may seem like necessities in your
household. But the highly idiosyncratic nature of
consumption raises a cultural question: Is there a
particularly gay way of spending?
Ambrose Bierce called money "an evidence of
culture.” He was kidding, sort of -- joking, as he
often did, about the airs of the rich and cultured.
(He also called money “a passport to polite
society.”) But at some basic level, money is surely
evidence of culture, in the sense that the items we
value enough to purchase help define who we are. So
if we can agree that there is a gay culture, there
should be testimony to it in our spending habits.
Just look at the ads in this magazine. They lead to
another question: With the economy the way it is,
can any of us afford to be gay?
This question presented itself to me in stark
terms this past summer as I sat on the Fire Island
Pines beach scrubbing my jeans with sand. A few
weeks earlier, having watched my mutual-fund gains
shrink from the merely mediocre to the almost
theoretical, I had resolved to cut back. And so when
I needed new jeans, I foreswore $300-plus designer
denim in favor of a $145 pair from the French basics
store A.P.C. The store puts a little label on its
untreated-denim jeans saying that if you soak them
in salt water and then rub them with sand, they will
break in easily and develop those striations and
wear marks that high-end designers charge the extra
money for.
That’s why I was abusing my jeans with beach sand
and drawing strange glances: I wanted a designer
look at a more affordable price. Whether that makes
me a fussy, stereotypical faggot is another
question, one I hope to address in this story.
Another stipulation, an obvious but important
one: $145 is still an outrageous sum for jeans. (And
actually, according to A.P.C.’s website, the store
now charges $155 for the same pair.) But not long
ago, at the New York City outpost of Universal Gear
(a chain store with locations in the gay sections of
four cities), I found Dolce & Gabbana jeans for
$274.95 -- on sale, down from $345. Under the cold
glare of D&G, $145 seems like a bargain. And this
particular gay man is not going to the Gap to buy
its saggy-assed jeans, even if they are only $55,
and even if I do live on a reporter’s salary, and
even if that does mean I eat leftovers most nights
and have traded down from Junípero gin ($35 per
bottle) to Tanqueray ($20 per bottle). Call me a
queen, but Gap jeans don’t fit me, in at least two
senses: They don’t fit my body, and, I would argue,
they don’t fit my culture.
My first phone call for this story was to Lee
Badgett, the brilliant economist with the Williams
Institute, an LGBT public policy think tank at the
University of California, Los Angeles. Badgett has
been researching gay people and poverty, and is so
polite that she suppressed a groan when I told her
the reason for my call, but I understood her
objections: This story could confirm a stereotype of
gays as more privileged than straights. It could
make us seem frivolous, and it would continue to
ignore the least advantaged in our community.
But then I asked Badgett to send me her
preliminary data on gays and poverty. She did so --
the data appear in this story for the first time --
and the numbers show a complicated picture, which
does reveal some financial advantage in being a gay
man. According to census figures, gay and lesbian
couples experience poverty at about the same rate as
straight couples of the same race, age, and
education level. But when you look at all gay men --
including singles -- they are half as likely to be
living in poverty as straight men, according to
numbers Badgett compiled from a 2002 survey by the
National Center for Health Statistics. That survey
showed that 2.1% of gay and bisexual men ages 18–44
live in poverty, compared with 4.2% of straight men
in the same age group. (Straight women and
lesbian/bisexual women in that age group had no
statistically significant difference in poverty
rates -- for each cohort, the rate was about 6%.)
These data may mean only that gay men under 45
who live in poverty are less likely than others to
reveal themselves in a survey. But could the data
also mean something else? Have gay men created a
culture in which poverty is less acceptable than it
is for straight men? And do we work harder to avoid
it because of those cultural expectations? To put it
blithely, is $145 the least we can spend on jeans,
because otherwise the jeans wouldn’t be gay enough?
And since
we’re asking difficult questions, how about this
one: Why would the rates of poverty among lesbians
and straight women be statistically
indistinguishable? One plausible answer: Sexism is a
more powerful force than homophobia. Badgett agrees:
“I would say in terms of defining people’s economic
existence, sex is definitely more powerful than
sexual orientation,” she says, pointing out that in
general, men earn more than women -- and gay men
earn more than lesbians.
Badgett also
raised the possibility that in an economy as weak as
America’s in late 2008, gay people might undergo
discrimination at higher rates as bosses fire
employees and pick among a larger applicant pool for
new workers. Data from the latest Out & Equal
Workplace Advocates survey -- again, presented in
this story for the first time -- offer reasons to
substantiate her concern. San Francisco–based Out &
Equal partners with Harris Interactive and Witeck-Combs
Communications every year to survey American
employees on their attitudes toward LGBT coworkers.
The group’s latest survey contains mostly good news:
79% of heterosexuals agree that gay people shouldn’t
be judged by their sexual orientation. Only 22% say
they think they would feel uncomfortable working for
a boss who is lesbian, gay, bisexual, or
transgender. But here’s the worrisome part: In 2005,
when the U.S. economy was vibrant (gross domestic
product grew 2.9% that year), 62% of heterosexuals
favored written nondiscrimination policies at their
companies. In the first two quarters of this year,
GDP grew only 2.1% (after shrinking 0.2% in the last
quarter of 2007), and now only 46% of heterosexuals
favor written antibias policies. Apparently equality
seems more affordable when everyone is richer.
What does
this mean for gay spending? So far, nothing. Witeck-Combs,
which compiles the most accurate market research on
LGBT people, released a survey in June showing that
gay men and lesbians were more likely than straight
people to be taking a vacation involving air travel
this year, even though everyone, gay and straight,
felt uneasy about doing so. Some 17% of gay people
were “absolutely certain” they would take a vacation
by air in the next six months, compared to just 12%
of heterosexuals. Only 49% of gays and lesbians were
“not at all likely” to take a vacation by air, as
opposed to 55% of straight people.
And gay
people are still worse at long-term financial
planning than heterosexuals: A July survey by Witeck-Combs
found that only 47% of LGBT people have retirement
accounts, compared to 51% of heterosexuals. Don’t we
know we will get old?
Maybe not.
Charlie Rounds, president of RSVP Vacations, says
that cruise sales haven’t slowed this year.
Similarly, Mitchell Gold, who along with Bob
Williams founded the North Carolina–based furniture
company that bears their names, says that even
though “every person I know is feeling this
economy,” his company has been doing fine, partly
because of the increasing number of gay couples with
children who are spending more to furnish their
homes. And finally, Chuck Wolfe, who runs the LGBT
political action committee the Gay and Lesbian
Victory Fund, told me that while some donors “have
said they want to be more judicious and spread
contributions out over more time, I can’t say there
has been any wholesale retreat from support this
year because of the economy.”
You might
expect gay people to cut back their spending, but it
appears we aren’t doing so, at least so far. Why? It
may be literally harder for gay men and lesbians to
spend less than it is for straight people, according
to Yeshiva University psychology professor John
Pachankis.