Discrimination in Economics and the Labor Market
Paper Session
Friday, Jan. 3, 2025 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM (PST)
- Chair: Gordon Dahl, University of California-San Diego
Are There Gender and Race/Ethnicity Differences in Promotion in Academic Economics?
Abstract
This study uses data from the 2009-2022 waves of Academic Analytics to examine gender and race/ethnicity differences in promotion to associate professor, full professor and named professor in economics. Academic Analytics is a company that provides data and analysis to higher education institutions including publications, grants, citations and awards to benchmark their faculty’s productivity. The sample includes annual data of all faculty provided by 323 higher education institutions in the US. We will use faculty who received PhDs from 2005-2012, that were observed as tenure-track assistant professors during that period. We will also follow individuals who were promoted to associate professor in 2010—2015 to determine whether they are promoted to full professor and named professor. Our research will determine whether research productivity is equally valued by gender and race/ethnicity in the academic promotion process.Taryn versus Taryn (she/her) versus Taryn (they/them): A Field Experiment on Pronoun Disclosure and Hiring Discrimination
Abstract
Nonbinary people have a gender identity that falls outside the male-female binary. To investigate hiring discrimination against this group, thousands of randomly generated fictitious resumes were submitted to job postings in pairs where the treatment resume contained pronouns listed below the name and the control resume did not. Two treatments are considered: nonbinary "they/them” and binary "he/him” or "she/her” pronouns congruent with implied sex. Hence, discrimination is estimated against nonbinary and presumed cisgender applicants who disclose pronouns. Results show that disclosing "they/them" pronouns reduces positive employer response by 5.4 percentage points. There is also evidence that discrimination is larger (approximately double) in Republican than Democratic geographies. By comparison, results are inconclusive regarding discrimination against presumed cisgender applicants who disclose pronouns; if discrimination does exist, it is of lower magnitude than discrimination against nonbinary applicants who disclose pronouns.Discussant(s)
Kate Bahn
,
Institute for Women's Policy Research
Trevon Logan
,
Ohio State University
Martha L. Olney
,
University of California-Berkeley
JEL Classifications
- J7 - Labor Discrimination
- J1 - Demographic Economics