Data says men consume more marijuana. It today’s environment, we tend to focus on the individuality of the person and not their gender, except in the consumer marketing world. Â Men and women have some different patterns of behavior which drives habits and buying decisions. Men spend more on cars, food and tend to be more risker takers with investments. Women spend more on healthcare, clothing and are more cautious with their savings.
Last year, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics released the data about how men and women are different when it comes to relaxing. On an average day, people age 15 and older spent 5.3 hours per day in leisure and sports activities, such as watching TV, socializing, or exercising. Men spent more time in leisure activities (5.6 hours) than did women (4.9 hours). These averages include people who did these activities and those who did not.
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So it should come as no surprise that men consume more marijuana than woman, since it follows the trend on relaxing and on them using more intoxicants. More men than women use cannabis. Gallop released data in the US sharing 18% of men consume marijuana vs 14% of women. In Canada, the 2019 National Cannabis Survey, also found more men than women use 20% vs 14%.
This dovetails into alcohol and cigarette use also.
Almost 58% of adult men report drinking alcohol in the past 30 days compared with 49% of adult women. Men are more likely to binge drink than women. Approximately 21% of men report binge drinking, compared with 13% of women.
Difference are also how men and women consume. Men were more likely to use joints/blunts, vaporizers, and concentrates, while women lean toward pipes and oral administration like edibles.
Men tend to enjoy beer more than women, thus most beer marketing is geared toward males. Bud Light, Coors Light and Miller Light are the largest selling intoxicant brands in the United States. Also an interesting note is men drink rosé for over 10 years at higher rates than women.
Nearly every 4th adult in the world smokes tobacco. More than one-third (37%) of men in the world do, but just over 8% of women.
Generally in the US, men tend to use all tobacco products at higher rates than women. In 2015, 16.7% of males and 13.6% of females smoked cigarettes. While Canada’s numbers are a lower but men at 13% and women only 9%. It says something about their tobacco campaigns they have fewer smokers.
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Brands use this data to drive product decision and then campaigns to entice customers. Â From this data, it seems the marijuana industry is doing a stronger job in reaching women than alcohol and tobacco…which makes sense with it being the least harmful product.