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Explaining gender differences in competitiveness: Testing a theory on Gender-Task Stereotypes

Explaining gender differences in competitiveness: Testing a theory on Gender-Task Stereotypes
Explaining gender differences in competitiveness: Testing a theory on Gender-Task Stereotypes
We examine an explanation for differences of self selection into competitive environments between men and women: gender-task stereotypes. Via data from a laboratory and a framed field experiment we test a recent model on stereotyping. Therefore, we contrast genders’ competitiveness between three tasks, two of which are male-connotated and one of which is not strongly associated with gender. An indirect test ensures that our quantitative and our sports task are stereotypically male, while for the verbal task concerning gender performance are absent. Controlling for potential confounds, we find that women self-select significantly less into competition against men only such tasks which are stereotypically male. In addition, we show that these stereotypes not only have consequences for the self selection into payment regimes, but also, for instance, for the selection of partners under the examined payment regimes. Overall, our results imply that the existence of gender connotations of tasks triggers significant gender effects with respect to different dimensions such as competitiveness, performance or partner choice. In particular, our experimental analysis strongly supports the underlying theory on stereotypes.
Grosse, Niels
0808c4b6-834e-43a0-8792-e5b0c05d00bc
Riener, Gerhard
8e8e27a6-4931-4e70-b223-688f3fd616c1
Dertwinkel-kalt, Markus
f1ea1217-6cc3-46b8-9ed8-d43f36233238
Grosse, Niels
0808c4b6-834e-43a0-8792-e5b0c05d00bc
Riener, Gerhard
8e8e27a6-4931-4e70-b223-688f3fd616c1
Dertwinkel-kalt, Markus
f1ea1217-6cc3-46b8-9ed8-d43f36233238

Grosse, Niels, Riener, Gerhard and Dertwinkel-kalt, Markus (2014) Explaining gender differences in competitiveness: Testing a theory on Gender-Task Stereotypes. SSRN Electronic Journal, 2014 (10), [2551206]. (doi:10.2139/ssrn.2551206).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We examine an explanation for differences of self selection into competitive environments between men and women: gender-task stereotypes. Via data from a laboratory and a framed field experiment we test a recent model on stereotyping. Therefore, we contrast genders’ competitiveness between three tasks, two of which are male-connotated and one of which is not strongly associated with gender. An indirect test ensures that our quantitative and our sports task are stereotypically male, while for the verbal task concerning gender performance are absent. Controlling for potential confounds, we find that women self-select significantly less into competition against men only such tasks which are stereotypically male. In addition, we show that these stereotypes not only have consequences for the self selection into payment regimes, but also, for instance, for the selection of partners under the examined payment regimes. Overall, our results imply that the existence of gender connotations of tasks triggers significant gender effects with respect to different dimensions such as competitiveness, performance or partner choice. In particular, our experimental analysis strongly supports the underlying theory on stereotypes.

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Published date: 23 November 2014

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Local EPrints ID: 479252
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479252
PURE UUID: 3393c54c-812e-4e85-a690-2658e6fc0999
ORCID for Gerhard Riener: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1056-2034

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Date deposited: 20 Jul 2023 16:48
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Niels Grosse
Author: Gerhard Riener ORCID iD
Author: Markus Dertwinkel-kalt

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