Publication | Closed Access
Are Women as Likely to Take Risks and Compete? Behavioural Findings from Central Vietnam
58
Citations
39
References
2010
Year
New TechnologiesSocial ChangeSocial SciencesGender DisparityRisk AttitudeGender IdentityGender StudiesPovertyBehavioural FindingsEconomicsFeminist EconomicsCentral VietnamGendered ContextFeminist PerspectiveSexual BehaviorFeminist TheoryRural VietnamAre WomenWomen's EmpowermentSociologyBusinessGender EconomicsGender Divide
Using controlled experiments to compare the risk attitude and willingness to compete of husbands and wives in 500 couples in rural Vietnam, we find that women are more risk averse than men and that, compared to men, women are less likely to choose to compete, irrespective of how likely they are to succeed. Relevant to development programmes concerned with lifting women out of poverty, our findings suggest that women may be more reluctant to adopt new technologies, take out loans, or engage in economic activities that offer higher expected returns, in order to avoid setups that require them to be more competitive or that have less predictable outcomes.
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