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The sources of the gender gap in economics enrolment

The sources of the gender gap in economics enrolment
The sources of the gender gap in economics enrolment
In many countries there is a considerable gender gap in enrolment for a bachelor’s degree in Economics, arguably an important stepping stone towards positions of influence in policymaking and occupations paying relatively high wages. We investigate the sources of this gap by looking in detail at the university admission process in the UK. We use a 50% random sample of administrative data covering all university applications in 2008 and find no evidence of universities discriminating against female applicants. What we find is that girls are less likely to apply for a bachelor’s degree in Economics to start with, even if once they apply their likelihood of enrolling is the same as for boys. Girls are less likely to study Maths in high school and this may deter them from applying to study Economics at the university level. However, even among those who have studied Maths, females are less likely to apply than males, suggesting that differences in the choice of A level subjects cannot explain the whole gap
1610-241X
1-23
Tonin, Mirco
2929ca00-ca4e-4eb3-bf2b-a5d233b80253
Wahba, Jackline
03ae9304-c329-40c6-9bfc-d91cfa9e7164
Tonin, Mirco
2929ca00-ca4e-4eb3-bf2b-a5d233b80253
Wahba, Jackline
03ae9304-c329-40c6-9bfc-d91cfa9e7164

Tonin, Mirco and Wahba, Jackline (2014) The sources of the gender gap in economics enrolment. CESifo Economic Studies, 1-23. (doi:10.1093/cesifo/ifu033).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In many countries there is a considerable gender gap in enrolment for a bachelor’s degree in Economics, arguably an important stepping stone towards positions of influence in policymaking and occupations paying relatively high wages. We investigate the sources of this gap by looking in detail at the university admission process in the UK. We use a 50% random sample of administrative data covering all university applications in 2008 and find no evidence of universities discriminating against female applicants. What we find is that girls are less likely to apply for a bachelor’s degree in Economics to start with, even if once they apply their likelihood of enrolling is the same as for boys. Girls are less likely to study Maths in high school and this may deter them from applying to study Economics at the university level. However, even among those who have studied Maths, females are less likely to apply than males, suggesting that differences in the choice of A level subjects cannot explain the whole gap

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e-pub ahead of print date: 27 October 2014
Organisations: Economics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 373736
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/373736
ISSN: 1610-241X
PURE UUID: b47ff642-1f57-4f2f-85a0-d9c11c7998d1
ORCID for Jackline Wahba: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0002-3443

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Date deposited: 30 Jan 2015 12:14
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:49

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Contributors

Author: Mirco Tonin
Author: Jackline Wahba ORCID iD

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