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Gender differences in willingness to compete: The role of public observability
Affiliation:1. University of Amsterdam and Tinbergen Institute, School of Economics, Roetersstraat 11, 1018WB Amsterdam, the Netherlands;2. University of Gothenburg, Vasagatan 1, 405 30 Gothenburg, Sweden;3. Lund University, Scheelevägen 15B, 223 63 Lund, Sweden
Abstract:A recent literature emphasizes that gender differences in the labor market may in part be driven by a gender gap in willingness to compete. However, whereas experiments in this literature typically investigate willingness to compete in private environments, real world competitions often have a more public nature, which introduces potential social image concerns. If such image concerns are important, and men and women differ in the degree to which they want to be seen as competitive, making tournament entry decisions publicly observable may further exacerbate the gender gap. We test this prediction using a laboratory experiment (N = 784) that varies the degree to which the decision to compete, and its outcome, is publicly observable. We find that public observability does not alter the magnitude of the gender gap in willingness to compete in an economically or statistically significant way.
Keywords:Gender differences  Competitiveness  Social image  Experiment  C91  D03  J16
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