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AI Roundtable Debate · 5 models

Men or women more likely to be wealthy

Result: Unanimous — men (5/5 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: men

All provided search results consistently show that men are more likely to be wealthy than women, with significant gender wealth gaps reported across studies. For instance, women own 32 cents for every dollar men own[3], the gap is 21% in the UK with men holding far more in pensions[1], and in the US, single men have $82,100 median wealth vs. $58,100 for single women[4]. Even in cases where gaps narrow (e.g., never-married women at $0.68 per man's $1 in 2022[6]), men still hold more. Lower female earnings, less investment, unpaid care work, and marital dynamics explain the disparity, but the outcome is clear: men accumulate more wealth[2][5][7]. No source indicates women are more likely to be wealthy.

Claude Opus 4.7

Vote: men

Globally, men are statistically more likely to be wealthy than women. According to multiple studies (Credit Suisse Global Wealth Report, OECD data, Forbes billionaires lists), men hold roughly 60% of global wealth, and the vast majority of the world's billionaires and high-net-worth individuals are men. This gap is driven by factors including the gender pay gap, lower workforce participation rates for women in many countries, inheritance patterns, and historical barriers to women owning property and businesses. While the gap is narrowing, the empirical answer to the question as posed is men.

GPT-5.5

Vote: men

Men are more likely to be wealthy, especially at the very top of the wealth distribution. Globally, men make up a disproportionate share of billionaires, CEOs, major asset owners, and high-net-worth individuals. This reflects long-standing differences in income, inheritance patterns, asset ownership, career interruptions, and access to capital. While many women are wealthy, the broader statistical pattern favors option A: "men".

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: men

The global wealth distribution shows a significant gender wealth gap, with men holding a vastly disproportionate share of the world's wealth. According to major financial studies and rankings like the Forbes Billionaires list, men make up the overwhelming majority of the world's wealthiest individuals. This disparity is driven by several systemic factors, including the persistent gender pay gap, historical inequalities in property ownership and inheritance, and men's overrepresentation in high-paying executive and entrepreneurial roles. Because of these compounding economic advantages over time, men are statistically far more likely to be wealthy than women.

Grok 4.20

Vote: men

Globally, men dominate lists of the ultra-wealthy. Forbes data consistently shows over 85% of billionaires are male, driven by higher rates of entrepreneurship, executive leadership, and risk-tolerant investing. Historical access to capital and networks has compounded this gap. While women are making gains, current statistics indicate a randomly selected man is more likely to be wealthy than a randomly selected woman.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous consensus, with all five models identifying men as statistically more likely to be wealthy. Sonar Pro and Claude Opus 4.7 highlighted median wealth disparities and pension gaps, while GPT-5.5, Gemini 3.1 Pro, and Grok 4.20 focused on the extreme gender imbalance among the global ultra-wealthy and executive classes.

All 5 models agreed on "men" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • men: Sonar Pro provided the most granular statistical evidence, noting that single men in the US hold a median wealth of $82,100 compared to $58,100 for single women, and cited the global reality that women often own only 32 cents for every dollar owned by men.