articleAmerican Economic ReviewApr 1, 2004Closed access

Gender and Competition at a Young Age

University of Minnesota

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Abstract

Gender gaps may be observed in a variety of economic and social environments. One of the possible determining factors is that men are more competitive than women and so, when the competitiveness of the environment increases, the performance of men increases relative to that of women. We test this hypothesis in a field study conducted with 9-year old children, running on a track. They first run alone and then in pairs over a short distance with different gender composition of the pairs. The results support the hypothesis that performance in competition varies according to gender. When children ran alone, there was no difference in performance. In competition boys, but not girls, improved their performance. This…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Economics
  • Competition (biology)
  • Demographic economics
  • Labour economics
  • Biology
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