TY - JOUR AU - Niederle,Muriel AU - Vesterlund,Lise TI - Do Women Shy Away From Competition? Do Men Compete Too Much? JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 11474 PY - 2005 Y2 - July 2005 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w11474 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w11474.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Muriel Niederle Department of Economics 579 Serra Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-6072 Tel: 650/723-7359 Fax: 650/725-5702 E-Mail: niederle@stanford.edu Lise Vesterlund Department of Economics University of Pittsburgh 4916 Posvar Hall Pittsburgh, PA 15260 Tel: 412/648-1794 Fax: 412/648-1793 E-Mail: vester@pitt.edu M2 - featured in NBER digest on 2006-02-01 AB - Competitive high ranking positions are largely occupied by men, and women remain scarce in engineering and sciences. Explanations for these occupational differences focus on discrimination and preferences for work hours and field of study. We examine if absent these factors gender differences in occupations may still occur. Specifically we explore whether women and men, on a leveled playing field, differ in their selection into competitive environments. Men and women in a laboratory experiment perform a real task under a non-competitive piece rate and a competitive tournament scheme. Although there are no gender differences in performance under either compensation, there is a substantial gender difference when participants subsequently choose the scheme they want to apply to their next performance. Twice as many men as women choose the tournament over the piece rate. This gender gap in tournament entry is not explained by performance either before or after the entry decision. Furthermore, while men are more optimistic about their relative performance, differences in beliefs only explain a small share of the gap in tournament entry. In a final task we assess the impact of non-tournament-specific factors, such as risk and feedback aversion, on the gender difference in compensation choice. We conclude that even controlling for these general factors, there is a large residual gender gap in tournament entry. ER -