Domain specificity of sex differences in competition

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Domain specificity of sex differences in competition
Abstract
There has been much recent literature about sex differences in competition, mostly noting that women are innately less competitive than men (Croson and Gneezy, 2009). This article examines the hypothesis that sex differences in propensity to compete are domain specific. We conducted a 2 (sex)×4 (domain) experiment with 434 participants examining competition decisions, familiarity with the domain, and performance. We find no overall sex differences in rates of competition when collapsing across all four domains, but do find sex differences in rates of competition for individual domains. Additionally we examined the importance of winning at competition on self-esteem using the Contingencies of Self-Worth, Competition subscale (Crocker et al., 2003) and find that the subscale fully mediates the effect of sex on the strength of competitive pay preferences.
Publication
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
Date
2012-06-01
Volume
83
Issue
1
Pages
151-157
Series
Gender Differences in Risk Aversion and Competition
Journal Abbr
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
Citation Key
wielandDomainSpecificitySex2012
Accessed
5/15/24, 7:09 PM
ISSN
0167-2681
Library Catalog
ScienceDirect
Citation
Wieland, A., & Sarin, R. (2012). Domain specificity of sex differences in competition. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, Gender Differences in Risk Aversion and Competition, 83(1), 151–157. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2011.06.019