Sexual objectification of women in media and the gender wage gap: Does exposure to objectifying pictures lower the reservation wage?
Abstract
Using an online experiment, we investigate the influence of sexual objectification in media on economic decision making. In the experiment, subjects are asked to evaluate advertisements in women’s magazines. In the treatment groups, the ads portray women in sexually objectifying poses, while the poses are neutral in the control group. The main research hypothesis is that sexual objectification tends to make women self-objectify, i.e., they internalize the view of the objectifying images, and as a result, they lower their reservation wage. We find that women in the treatment groups do self-objectify: Women who were exposed to the objectifying images described themselves with words related to body shape or size significantly more often than women in the control group. Adding a warning text about the fact that photoshopped images can create unrealistic body ideals did not mitigate the self-objectification. However, we do not find any effect of the sexual objectification on women’s reservation wages. If we take the results at face value, they do suggest that the objectification of women in media, while having important psychological and emotional effects, does not seem to affect women’s economic behavior, at least not directly.
Publisher
University of Gothenburg
Other description
JEL-classification: C91, J16
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2022-08Author
Carlsson, Fredrik
Kataria, Mitesh
Lampi, Elina
Keywords
online experiment
sexual objectification
media
economic decision making
Publication type
conference paper, other
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
824
Language
eng