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Gender and birth-order differences in time and risk preferences and decisions

Abstract
We study how gender, birth order, and number of siblings are related to stated time and risk preferences and to real-life decisions. We use survey data covering about 2,300 individuals and find that time and risk preferences are significantly correlated among women but not among men. We also find that stated time and risk preferences have clear explanatory power for real-life decisions, but in different ways for men and women. Moreover, risk preferences have stronger explanatory power for males than for females, whose decisions are more related to birth order and number of siblings. For example, the often claimed result that first-borns are more likely to have higher education is found among women only, while risk aversion and patience can explain part of men´s corresponding choice.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/21203
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Revised version, June 2011 (213.1Kb)
Date
2009-10-05
Author
Lampi, Elina
Nordblom, Katarina
Keywords
risk preferences
time preferences
gender
birth order
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
388
Language
eng
Metadata
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