The cage is golden because leaving would mean losing the gold.
The metaphor of a golden cage, a luxurious confinement where material comfort prevents departure, predates its application to work. Variations appear in European literature from the seventeenth century onward, describing marriages, royal courts, and any situation where privilege comes at the cost of freedom.1
Applied to modern professional life, the golden cage describes a well-compensated position that a person wants to leave but cannot afford to. The compensation is high enough to create financial dependencies, a mortgage, a school tuition, a standard of living, that make departure feel economically irrational even when the work is unsatisfying.2
The phrase differs from golden handcuffs, which describes specific financial instruments designed to retain employees. The golden cage is not a retention strategy. It is a psychological condition, the recognition that the rewards of staying have become the barriers to leaving.3
The image appears across cultures in slightly different forms. In Chinese, the expression 金丝雀 (jīnsī què), meaning "golden cage bird," carries the same implication. In German, goldener Käfig describes the same trade-off between comfort and autonomy.4
What makes the metaphor precise is that the cage is not hidden. The person inside can see the outside. The bars are not walls. The confinement is visible, voluntary in legal terms, and binding in practice.5