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The quiet and growing crisis of male loneliness
The Straits Times
|October 04, 2025
It is costing lives, money and social connectedness. But a growing number of countries are taking steps to fix this.
Loneliness has long been dismissed as a personal misfortune. But evidence now shows it is widespread, measurable and costly. It harms health, reduces productivity and weakens social cohesion. Men are especially vulnerable: They are less likely to sustain close friendships, less willing to seek help and more prone to withdraw when social ties fray.
The numbers are stark. In Britain, a 2021 YouGov survey found one in five men twice the rate, compared with women had no close friends. In America, the share of men without close friendships rose from 3 per cent to 15 per cent between 1990 and 2021. In Singapore, a study by the Institute of Policy Studies found the youngest cohort those aged 21 to 34 - reported the highest levels of loneliness.
This is more than a social concern; it is a public health and economic issue. Meta-analyses show that chronic loneliness increases the risk of early death by age 30 to around 50 per cent, a risk comparable to smoking or obesity. The economic drain is sobering. Lonely employees are less engaged and more likely to quit. In male-dominated sectors like construction, logistics and tech, this threatens stability and output.
WHY MEN ARE MORE VULNERABLE
The roots of male loneliness are both cultural and structural. From a young age, men are socialised to value stoicism and self-reliance. Their friendships tend to be activity-based - formed around school, work or sport - rather than being emotionally connected. When these structures disappear, so does the social scaffolding. Retirement or the loss of a partner can dismantle male networks abruptly. By contrast, women's social circles, often built around kinship and conversation, tend to be more resilient.
Rising loneliness among young men may seem paradoxical in a hyper-connected world. Yet, three trends may explain the landscape.
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