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- Title
The Effect of Peer Gender on Major Choice in Business School.
- Authors
Zölitz, Ulf; Feld, Jan
- Abstract
Business degrees are popular and lead to high earnings. Female business graduates, however, earn less than their male counterparts. These gender differences can be traced back to university, where women shy away from majors like finance that lead to high earnings. In this paper, we investigate how the gender composition of peers in business school affects women's and men's major choices and labor market outcomes. We find that women who are randomly assigned to teaching sections with more female peers become less likely to choose male-dominated majors like finance and more likely to choose female-dominated majors like marketing. After graduation, these women end up in jobs where their earnings grow more slowly. Men, on the other hand, become more likely to choose male-dominated majors and less likely to choose female-dominated majors when they had more female peers in business school. However, men's labor market outcomes are not significantly affected. Taken together, our results show that studying with more female peers in business school increases gender segregation in educational choice and affects labor market outcomes. This paper was accepted by Axel Ockenfels, decision analysis.
- Subjects
SCHOOL choice; DECISION making; GENDER; BUSINESS schools; LABOR market; COLLEGE majors
- Publication
Management Science, 2021, Vol 67, Issue 11, p6963
- ISSN
0025-1909
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1287/mnsc.2020.3860