In-group, out-group effects in distributional preferences: The case of gender

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Abstract

We examine gender differences when eliciting distributional preferences as conducted by the Equality Equivalence Test, which has the ability to classify subjects into preferences types. Preferences are elicited when individuals interact with an individual of the same gender and with an individual of the opposite gender. We find elicited preferences are robust across both in-group (same gender) and out-group (opposite gender) interactions. When analyzing the intensity of benevolence (or malevolence) we find that overall women exhibit more malevolence than men, but there is no gender difference for benevolence. Furthermore, women exhibit a higher level of in-group favoritism than men.

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Jaber-Lopez, T., Baier, A., & Davis, B. J. (2021, May 1). In-group, out-group effects in distributional preferences: The case of gender. German Economic Review. De Gruyter Open Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1515/ger-2019-0119

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