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Boys will always be boys? The impacts of gender-based Affirmative Action and Role Models on competitiveness in the lab

Gender differences in labour market outcomes are pervasive in current society. Competitiveness is viewed as a possible factor contributing to the favourable labour market outcomes for men, with the stylised fact being that men are more competitive than women on average. In this study, we experimenta...

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Main Author: Hare, Aimee Elizabeth
Other Authors: Burns, Justine
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hare, Aimee Elizabeth
author2 Burns, Justine
author_browse Burns, Justine
Hare, Aimee Elizabeth
author_facet Burns, Justine
Hare, Aimee Elizabeth
author_sort Hare, Aimee Elizabeth
collection Thesis
description Gender differences in labour market outcomes are pervasive in current society. Competitiveness is viewed as a possible factor contributing to the favourable labour market outcomes for men, with the stylised fact being that men are more competitive than women on average. In this study, we experimentally investigate whether institutional structures (gender-based Affirmative Action and Role Models) mitigate the gender differences in competitiveness. Although Affirmative Action has been explored in the literature, the longer-term implications of the preferential treatment creating role model representation have not been examined. Consistent with the literature, we find men have a higher preference for a competitive environment compared with women in our sample. However, there are no significant impacts of the gender based institutional structures on the choice to compete in our experiment. When analysing the responsiveness of performance to a competitive environment and the associated beliefs, we see the female role model treatment encourages a competitive spirit in everyone, whereas the Affirmative Action treatment has a negative effect on the competitive performance of African men. In this experiment, gender-based institutions therefore either have unexpected effects of encouraging competitiveness in all participants, or inadvertently reinforce competitiveness gaps across other dimensions of identity, such as population-group. One therefore needs to be considerate of other dimensions of identity in addition to gender when devising preferential treatment policies, and the resulting role model representation, in practice. Changes in beliefs can only partially be exercised as an explanatory channel for these effects.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:42:06.167Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher School of Economics
publisherStr School of Economics
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29505 Boys will always be boys? The impacts of gender-based Affirmative Action and Role Models on competitiveness in the lab Hare, Aimee Elizabeth Burns, Justine Applied Economics Gender differences in labour market outcomes are pervasive in current society. Competitiveness is viewed as a possible factor contributing to the favourable labour market outcomes for men, with the stylised fact being that men are more competitive than women on average. In this study, we experimentally investigate whether institutional structures (gender-based Affirmative Action and Role Models) mitigate the gender differences in competitiveness. Although Affirmative Action has been explored in the literature, the longer-term implications of the preferential treatment creating role model representation have not been examined. Consistent with the literature, we find men have a higher preference for a competitive environment compared with women in our sample. However, there are no significant impacts of the gender based institutional structures on the choice to compete in our experiment. When analysing the responsiveness of performance to a competitive environment and the associated beliefs, we see the female role model treatment encourages a competitive spirit in everyone, whereas the Affirmative Action treatment has a negative effect on the competitive performance of African men. In this experiment, gender-based institutions therefore either have unexpected effects of encouraging competitiveness in all participants, or inadvertently reinforce competitiveness gaps across other dimensions of identity, such as population-group. One therefore needs to be considerate of other dimensions of identity in addition to gender when devising preferential treatment policies, and the resulting role model representation, in practice. Changes in beliefs can only partially be exercised as an explanatory channel for these effects. 2019-02-13T13:08:02Z 2019-02-13T13:08:02Z 2018 2019-02-13T13:05:02Z Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29505 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Applied Economics
Hare, Aimee Elizabeth
Boys will always be boys? The impacts of gender-based Affirmative Action and Role Models on competitiveness in the lab
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Boys will always be boys? The impacts of gender-based Affirmative Action and Role Models on competitiveness in the lab
title_full Boys will always be boys? The impacts of gender-based Affirmative Action and Role Models on competitiveness in the lab
title_fullStr Boys will always be boys? The impacts of gender-based Affirmative Action and Role Models on competitiveness in the lab
title_full_unstemmed Boys will always be boys? The impacts of gender-based Affirmative Action and Role Models on competitiveness in the lab
title_short Boys will always be boys? The impacts of gender-based Affirmative Action and Role Models on competitiveness in the lab
title_sort boys will always be boys the impacts of gender based affirmative action and role models on competitiveness in the lab
topic Applied Economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29505
work_keys_str_mv AT hareaimeeelizabeth boyswillalwaysbeboystheimpactsofgenderbasedaffirmativeactionandrolemodelsoncompetitivenessinthelab