She Could Not Agree More: The Role of Failure Attribution in Shaping the Gender Gap in Competition Persistence

Research output: Working paperResearch

In competitive and high-reward domains such as corporate leadership and entrepreneurship, women are not only underrepresented but they are also more likely to drop-out after failure. In this study, we conducted a laboratory experiment to investigate the influence of attributing failure to one of the three causal attributions - luck, effort, and ability - on the gender difference in competition persistence. Participants compete in a real effort task and then their success or failure is attributed to one of three causal attributions. We find significant gender differences in competition persistence when failure is attributed to a lack of ability, with women dropping out more. On the contrary, when suggested that failure was due to lack of luck, women’s competition persistence after failure increases relative to men. We find no gender difference when failure is attributed to a lack of effort. Our findings have important implications for designing feedback mechanisms to reduce the gender gap in competitive domains.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages43
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Dec 2020
SeriesCEBI Working Paper Series
Number25/20

    Research areas

  • decision analysis, competition, gender gap, performance feedback, laboratory experiment

ID: 254665285