It is a cultural universal that people are discouraged from having sex as often and with as many people as they want to. Every culture I've ever heard of imposes many restrictions on sex. I've never heard of a culture that shames people for being too stingy with sex.
If we assume that culture is adaptive, this means that the human sex drive is too strong for humans in society. Why is this? As sex drive is a phenotypic feature with extraordinarily strong selective pressure, why haven't we evolved to have the proper sex drive?
One reason could be that reduced sex drive is selected for at the level of the group, while higher sex drive is selected for at the level of the individual.
"Come on. Everyone is doing it."
"Don't be a prude."
"What are you, gay or something?"
"He cheated on you? I guess you weren't doing enough for him."
"A wife must satisfy her husband."
"Frigid."
Social standing is awarded to women with many children.
Spousal rape was legal in some US states as recently as 1993, the first state outlawed it in 1975.
And so on. Which is to say cultures discourage certain kinds of sex in certain contexts and encourage others. Subcultures differ in the degree to which they encourage and discourage sex. It may not be that the human sex drive is too strong for humans in society but that biology lacks the precision guidance of cultural norms which can perhaps support more complex reproductive strategies or change faster in response to new economic circumstances.
It may well be/have been in the reproductive interests of women to have no sex before marriage and then lots of sex with her husband, for example. One way biological and cultural evolution could implement this strategy is by lowering the female sex drive to ensure chastity until marriage, and then rely on cultural expectation and the male sex drive to encourage sex within marriage. Though I recall a study indicating that women require more familiarity with their partner for arousal than men require. I can't find it though, and of course it coincides with cultural stereotypes. But this would suggest that the monogamous sex strategy for women is implemented biologically as well.
Note also that the shame associated with pre-marital sex is traditionally much stronger for women. Men are often lauded for their sexual accomplishments. Which is something you might expect to see as a difference in mating strategies after considering the relative cost of reproduction.