Gender, competitiveness, and task difficulty: Evidence from the field

Publication date

2020-06

Authors

Hoyer, Britta
van Huizen, ThomasISNI 0000000395588582
Keijzer, L.M.ISNI 0000000393660106
Rezaei Khavas, T.ORCID 0000-0002-1542-4098ISNI 0000000388211349
Rosenkranz, StephanieORCID 0000-0002-5931-7913ISNI 0000000045822850
Westbrock, B.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

This study examines the gender gap in competitiveness in an educational setting and tests whether this gap depends on the difficulty of the task at hand. For this purpose, we administered a series of experiments during the final exam of a university course. We confronted three cohorts of undergraduate students with a set of bonus questions and the choice between an absolute and a tournament grading scheme for these questions. To test the moderating impact of task difficulty, we (randomly) varied the difficulty of the questions between treatment groups. We find that, on average, women are significantly less likely to select the tournament scheme. However, the results show that the gender gap in tournament entry is sizable when the questions are relatively easy, but much smaller and statistically insignificant when the questions are difficult.

Keywords

Gender gap, Competitiveness, Task difficulty, Taverne, B Journal, SDG 5 - Gender Equality

Citation

Hoyer, B, van Huizen, T M, Keijzer, L M, Rezaei Khavas, T, Rosenkranz, S & Westbrock, B 2020, 'Gender, competitiveness, and task difficulty: Evidence from the field', Labour Economics, vol. 64, 101815, pp. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.labeco.2020.101815