Gender, Social Networks And Performance

Sunday 13th July 2014
CINET:
1412
Lindenlaub, I. and Prummer, A.
This paper documents gender differences in social ties and develops a theory that links them to disparities in men's and women's labor market performance. Men's networks lead to better access to information, women's to higher peer pressure. Both affect effort in a model of teams, each beneficial in different environments. We find that information is particularly valuable under high uncertainty, whereas peer pressure is more valuable in the opposite case. We therefore expect men to outperform women in jobs that are characterized by high earnings uncertainty, such as the financial sector or film industry - in line with the evidence rationale.
Keywords
Networks
Peer Pressure
Gender
Labor Market Outcomes
D85
Z13
J16
Themes
networks