Gender and other determinants of trust and reciprocity in an experimental labour market amongst Chinese students


Autoria(s): Dulleck, Uwe; Fooken, Jonas; He, Yumei
Contribuinte(s)

Botticini, Maristella

Abbring, Jaap

Biais, Bruno

Data(s)

01/08/2013

Resumo

Due to economic and demographic changes highly educated women play an important role on the Chinese labour market. Gender has been shown to be an important characteristic that influences behaviour in economic experiments, as have, to a lesser degree, academic major, age and income. We provide a study looking at trust and reciprocity and their determinants in a labour market laboratory experiment. Our experimental data is based on two games, the Gift Exchange Game (GEG) and a variant of this game (the Wage Promising Game, WPG) where the employer's wage offer is non-binding and the employer can choose the wage freely after observing the workers effort. We and that women are less trusting and reciprocal than men in the GEG while this cannot be found in the WPG. Letting participants play the GEG and the WPG, allows us to disentangle reciprocal and risk attitudes. While in the employer role, it seems to be that risk attitude is the main factor, this is not confirmed analysing decisions in the worker role.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/62813/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/62813/1/DulleckFookenHe_EEA.pdf0h2_Hr7%282_D__%28__%28__%28h__%28__%28___%28d__%28__%28___%28%60__%28__%28.pdf

http://www.eea-esem.com/EEA-ESEM/2013/prog/viewpaper.asp?pid=1541

Dulleck, Uwe, Fooken, Jonas, & He, Yumei (2013) Gender and other determinants of trust and reciprocity in an experimental labour market amongst Chinese students. In Botticini, Maristella , Abbring, Jaap, & Biais, Bruno (Eds.) Proceedings of EEA-ESEM2013, Gothenburg, Sweden, pp. 1-16.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 [please consult the author]

Fonte

QUT Business School; School of Economics & Finance

Tipo

Conference Paper