Bridging the gender divide: an experimental analysis of group formation in African villages

TitleBridging the gender divide: an experimental analysis of group formation in African villages
Publication TypeOther
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsA. Barr, M. Dekker, and M. Fafchamps
Series titleASC working paper
Issue87
Pagination - 36
Date Published2009///
PublisherAfrican Studies Centre
Place PublishedLeiden
Publication Languageeng
Keywordsgender, group formation, Zimbabwe
Abstract

Assortative matching occurs in many social contexts. We experimentally investigate gender assorting in sub-Saharan villages. In the experiment, co-villagers could form groups to share winnings in a gamble choice game. The extent to which grouping arrangements were or could be enforced and, hence, the distribution of interaction costs were exogenously varied. Thus, we can distinguish between the effects of homophily and interaction costs on the extent of observed gender assorting. We find that interaction costs matter - there is less gender assorting when grouping depends on trust. In part, this is due to trust based on co-memberships in gender-mixed religions

Notes

Also BREAD Working paper no. 268: http://ipl.econ.duke.edu/bread/papers/working/268.pdf

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/14565
Citation Key3978