Gender differences in the choice of field of study and the relevance of income information. Insights from a field experiment

Autor: Claudia Finger, Martin Ehlert, Heike Solga, Alessandra Rusconi
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Economics
Stereotyp
decision making criterion
Stereotype
Berufswahl
Developmental psychology
information
gender-specific factors
gender roles and stereotypes
050602 political science & public administration
050207 economics
Gender role
monetary returns
college major choice
media_common
Occupational Research
Occupational Sociology

Entscheidungskriterium
Sozialwissenschaften
Soziologie

05 social sciences
Wirtschaft
Bundesrepublik Deutschland
0506 political science
field experiment
ddc:300
Einkommensunterschied
Psychology
Graduation
choice of studies
media_common.quotation_subject
education
Wage
Federal Republic of Germany
Studienwahl
gender inequality
Intervention (counseling)
0502 economics and business
ddc:330
difference in income
Relevance (information retrieval)
Berufsforschung
Berufssoziologie

Social sciences
sociology
anthropology

Earnings
Lohnhöhe
gender role
wage level
Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
occupational choice
geschlechtsspezifische Faktoren
Women's Studies
Feminist Studies
Gender Studies

Geschlechtsrolle
Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
stereotype
Panel data
Zdroj: Research in Social Stratification and Mobility
Popis: Research consistently reports pronounced earnings differences between men and women, even among the highly educated. This article investigates whether students’ responsiveness to information on income returns relates to gender differences in major choices, which might contribute to the persistent gender wage gap. We use field-experimental panel data on students in Berlin (Germany), starting one year before high school graduation. Our intervention comprised information on major-specific returns to college and was provided to students in randomly selected schools. By comparing the major-specific application decisions of “treated” and “untreated” high school seniors, we examine whether, and why, male and female students respond differently to this information. As potential mechanisms behind a gender-specific treatment effect, we analyze the role of gender stereotypes and roles associated with certain job attributes. We find that providing income information on college majors only influences the major choices of male (not female) students with college intention: treated male students on average applied to majors associated with higher mean income. Further analyses suggest that this gender difference in the treatment effect cannot be explained by differential distributions or effects of preferred job attributes.
Databáze: OpenAIRE