Gender, risk preferences and willingness to compete in a random sample of the Swedish population
Abstract
Experimental results from student or other non-representative convenience samples often suggest that men, on average, are more risk-taking and competitive than women. Here we explore whether these gender preference gaps also exist in a simple random sample of the
Swedish adult population. Our design comprises four different treatments to systematically explore how the experimental context may impact gender gaps; a baseline treatment, a treatment where participants are primed with their own gender, and a treatment where the participants know the gender of their counterpart (man or woman). We look at willingness to compete in two domains: a math task and a verbal task. We find no gender differences in risk preferences or in willingness to compete in the verbal task in this random sample. There is some support for men being more competitive than women in the math task, in particular in the pooled sample.
The effect size is however considerably smaller than what is typically found. We further find no consistent impact of treatment on (the absence of) the gender gap in preferences.
Publisher
University of Gothenburg
Other description
JEL codes: D91, C83, C91
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2018-08Author
Boschini, Anne
Dreber, Anna
von Essen, Emma
Muren, Astri
Ranehill, Eva
Keywords
gender differences
competitiveness
risk-taking
experiment
random representative sample
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
740
Language
eng