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Gender gap in self‐employment: The role of risk attitudes
Author(s) -
Hayduk Iryna,
Williams Donald R.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
economics of transition and institutional change
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2577-6983
pISSN - 2577-6975
DOI - 10.1111/ecot.12209
Subject(s) - self employment , demographic economics , gender gap , entrepreneurship , differential (mechanical device) , robustness (evolution) , differential effects , economics , psychology , labour economics , medicine , finance , biochemistry , chemistry , engineering , gene , aerospace engineering
This paper examines the link between the willingness to take risk and the gender gap in self‐employment in the transition economy, where for decades entrepreneurship was considered a crime. Using rich data on risk preferences and entrepreneurial activities, we show that male–female risk tolerance differential is the main determinant of the gender gap in self‐employment in Ukraine. The decomposition results indicate that up to 38% of the gap can be attributed to this factor. Robustness tests support the validity of the baseline findings by suggesting that the results are not confounded by such factors as being unemployed before starting a current job, having a self‐employed household member, or living in a relatively wealthy household before transitioning to self‐employment.