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Attribution Bias by Gender: Evidence from a Laboratory Experiment
YSI Webinar with Professor James Fenske
Start time:
May 18, 2020 @ 4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
EDT
Location:
Online
Type:
Other
Speakers
James Fenske
Professor
Description
It is well understood that achieving gender parity matters for economic development. However, despite substantial progress in recent decades, gender inequality in the areas of well-being, rights, opportunities, and economic and political empowerment persists in many developing countries. A vast literature shows that discrimination leads to differences in men and women’s labour market outcomes at several stages, including screening, hiring, and promotion. A key mechanism that explains the differences in economic outcomes of men and women is that of attribution bias. Attribution bias by gender is understood as the tendency of observers to attribute good performance of males to skill and females to luck in certain tasks and vice versa. For example, physicians increase their referrals more to a male surgeon than to a female surgeon after a good patient outcome but lower their referrals more to a female surgeon than a male surgeon after a bad outcome. Such attribution bias has also been shown to be present among teachers who attribute boys' successes in mathematics to ability and girls' successes to effort.
In order to get a deeper understanding of the underlying mechanism that explains gender gap, the Economic Development WG is launching a webinar on one of the topical areas of research – gender. In this meeting, we will host Professor James Fenske who will discuss his recent paper on attribution bias by gender. The study presents evidence from a laboratory experiment by testing for the presence of attribution bias by gender through a principal-agent approach. It sheds light on whether a person’s gender has an effect on the way we interpret information about his or her ability. A lab experiment provides a controlled setting in which other factors are unlikely to influence participants’ behaviour.
Professor James Fenske is currently affiliated with the Department of Economics at the University of Warwick and is also a Research Associate at the Centre for Competitive Advantage in the Global Economy (CAGE). Previously, he held position as an Associate Professor at the University of Oxford. He has vast expertise in Economic History and Development Economics and is the recipient of several awards, including the Philip Leverhulme Prize in Economics.
Paper: Fenske, J., Castagnetti, A., & Sharma, K. (2020). Attribution Bias by Gender: Evidence from a Laboratory Experiment (No. 452). Competitive Advantage in the Global Economy (CAGE).
Link to the paper: https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/research/centres/cage/manage/publications/452-2020_fenske.pdf
Hosted by Working Group(s):
Organizers
Attendees
Nur Batrisya Fathima
Eric Decker
Guylaine Nouwoue
Arjo Shrestho
Alexandros Kordas
Akanksha Soni
Becky zhu
Aishwarya Atluri
Oliver Hanney
Adam Nowakowski
Md. Al-Hasan
Shizhuo Wang
jiawei wu
giuseppe simone
SRINJAY CHANDRASEKAR
Nicholas Lacourse
Santiago José Gahn
Dheeraj Tulsani
YANGFEI LIN
Ana Peixoto
Karmini Sharma
Mandem Jim
anjali sharma
Ibshar Khan
Rooe Top
Shirooa Purna
Kanak Chanpa
Khaleda Yemin
annesha muzib
Tafsia Muzib
Larissa Simões
Amitoj Singh
xinran liu
Sazeda Akter
Eshrat Sharmin
Achmad Kautsar
Minh Tam Bui
Valentina San Martino
Md Jahurul Islam
Mariana RamÃrez
Marcelo Gantier Mita
Kavitha Srikanth
Khushboo Bhanushali
Elvis Avenyo
Ezebuilo Ukwueze
Ajwad Hossain
farhad gohardani
Avinno Faruk
Luisa Scarcella
Joana Vaccarezza
Judith Derndorfer
Mayuri Chaturvedi
umesh moramudali
Ajibola Akanji
Ruchira Bhattacharya
Md Labib Sadbin Hasan
Jheelum Sarkar
Sophie Eales-White
Cicero Braga
Michael Cosh
Camila Alvarenga
Henry Faulkner-Ellis
Anisha Sawhney
YANHUI WANG
通 方
srikanth velijala
Soyra Gune
TANISHA GHOSAL
Alice LIN
Bijun Qin
Anika Muzib Suchi
Tarik Imamović
GEORGE SICHINGA
Jay Pocklington
Giuliano Toshiro Yajima
Farjana Tonny
supraja parthasarathy
Sawsan Abdul-Jalil
Marta Musso