Acting Woman: Math Performance and Gender Identity
Abstract
In this paper I causally explore whether perceived math ability has an impact on perceived
gender identity. I base my experiment on a framework proposed by Akerlof and Kranton (2000),
and randomly assign individuals to receive a signal of relatively high or relatively low math
ability. Because math is associated with male stereotypes, I hypothesize that individuals who
perceive themselves as good at math identify as more masculine and believe they are perceived
as more masculine by others. If true, this indicates women may suffer a gender identity cost for
being good at math, which may be contributing to persistent gender gaps in STEM-fields.
Including all respondents in my analysis I find no significant effect of treatment on perceived
gender identity. When only including participants who consider math to be masculine or gender
neutral there is a significant treatment effect indicating those who received a signal of high
relative math performance identified as more masculine, and believed they were perceived as
more masculine by others. This suggests women who perceive themselves as good at math may
experience a gender identity cost, while men may experience a gender identity gain. However,
the results are not robust to the inclusion of collected control variables and therefore needs to
be confirmed in future research.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2023-06-29Author
Allestam, Joanna
Series/Report no.
2023:176
Language
eng