articleJournal of the European Economic AssociationApr 1, 2009GREEN OA

Gender Differences in Risk Aversion and Ambiguity Aversion

Maastricht University · University of Chicago

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Abstract

This paper demonstrates gender differences in risk aversion and ambiguity aversion. It also contributes to a growing literature relating economic preference parameters to psychological measures by asking whether variations in preference parameters among persons, and in particular across genders, can be accounted for by differences in personality traits and traits of cognition. Women are more risk-averse than men. Over an initial range, women require no further compensation for the introduction of ambiguity but men do. At greater levels of ambiguity, women have the same marginal distaste for increased ambiguity as men. Psychological variables account for some of the interpersonal variation in risk aversion.…

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Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Ambiguity
  • Ambiguity aversion
  • Risk aversion (psychology)
  • Economics
  • Loss aversion
  • Sociology
  • Financial economics
  • Microeconomics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Gender equality
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