Identity, Culture, and the Economics of Gender
Paper Session
Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM (EST)
- Chair: Claudia Olivetti, Dartmouth College
Gender Norms, Integration Costs, and Missing Women in Firms
Abstract
Where social norms favor gender segregation, firms may find it costly to employ both men and women. If the costs of integration are largely fixed, firms will integrate only if their expected number of female employees under integration exceeds some threshold. We deploy a methodology that uses the distribution of female employment across firms to estimate the share of firms with binding integration costs and counterfactual female employment at all-male firms. Using survey data on manufacturing firms in 65 countries, we find evidence for these binding integration costs (and a corresponding excess of all-male firms) in Middle East and North Africa (MENA), and South Asia but not in other regions. We also find some evidence that the intensity of gender segregation preferences is correlated with these integration costs in the MENA region.Hacking Gender Stereotypes
Abstract
Who are the girls that decide to sign-up for STEM programs and coding clubs? In this paper, we rely on a large set of survey data from students to analyze how fe- male students who apply to the clubs differ from other students in the schools. Girls applying to coding clubs have higher STEM interest, but they perceive their own gender as a stronger barrier to achieve their educational goal. Supporting this pool of female applicants with STEM programs might have a substantial role in affecting their educational and occupational career and closing the gender gaps in STEM.Gender Economics and the Meaning of Discrimination
Abstract
Recent advances in economics hold much promise for an improved understanding of complex issues concerning gender and gender inequalities. New sources of data, from experiments through administrative rosters, give us unprecedented ability to measure individual traits, behaviors, and histories. A more realistic economics of choice based on behavioral economics, studies of social influences on economic outcomes, and a recognition of the role of cultural persistence and transmission in patterns of behavior have blurred our traditional separation of preferences and constraints. In much applied work, however, development of a broader conceptual framework run into persistent habits of mind in economics that have prevented us from seeing beyond the discrimination vs. preferences dichotomy generally applied to gender differences.Discussant(s)
Nancy Folbre
,
University of Massachusetts-Amherst
Paola Giuliano
,
University of California-Los Angeles
JEL Classifications
- J1 - Demographic Economics