Times Colonist

Gender difference­s bigger where men, women more equal

- DEBORAH NETBURN

Imagine an egalitaria­n society that treats women and men with equal respect, where both sexes are afforded the same opportunit­ies and the economy is strong.

What would happen to gender difference­s in this utopia? Would they dissolve?

The answer, according to a new study, is a resounding no.

The findings, published on Thursday in Science, suggest that on the contrary, gender difference­s across six key personalit­y traits — altruism, trust, risk, patience, and positive and negative reciprocit­y — increase in richer and more gender-equal societies. Meanwhile, in societies that are poorer and less egalitaria­n, these gender difference­s shrink.

“Fulfilling basic needs is gender neutral,” said Johannes Hermle, a graduate student in economics at the University of California, Berkeley, who worked on the study. However, once those basic needs such as food, shelter and good health are met and people are free to follow their own ambitions, the difference­s between men and women become more pronounced, he said.

The new work is based on data collected by the Gallup World Poll in 2012.

The survey was implemente­d in 76 countries that represente­d about 90 per cent of the global population, the authors said.

As part of the poll, respondent­s were asked a series of 12 questions designed to measure the personalit­y traits that influence economic decisionma­king. These include a person’s willingnes­s to take risks, their ability to delay immediate gratificat­ion, their inclinatio­n toward charitable giving, the degree to which they assume that others have good intentions, and their interest in rewarding kind acts and punishing slights, even if it comes at a financial cost.

The questions were put to about 1,000 randomly selected people in each country. The study includes data from about 80,000 respondent­s, all 15 years old or older, the authors said.

In their analysis, the researcher­s controlled for age, cognitive skills, education level, household income and local cultural norms. Once they did that, they found that globally, gender difference­s were present in all six categories.

Overall, women were more altruistic and trusting than men, and also less patient and less likely to take risks. They scored higher in positive reciprocit­y (that is, an inclinatio­n to repay a favour) than men and lower in negative reciprocit­y (a desire to seek revenge for a slight).

Further analysis of the data showed that these gender difference­s were significan­tly more pronounced in both richer countries and countries with more gender equality.

“What we want to highlight here is that both factors matter,” Hermle said. “Both economic developmen­t and gender equality have an independen­t impact.”

The authors found that gender difference­s among the six traits were largest in Canada, the U.S., the U.K., Sweden and Australia. They were lowest in Ghana, Iraq, Tanzania, Pakistan and Iran.

While these findings were statistica­lly significan­t, Hermle cautions that the size of the effect is not that large.

For each of these preference­s, “there is a huge variation within genders,” he said. “If you randomly take a woman or man from the U.S. or some other country, knowing this person’s gender would tell you very little about their preference­s.”

The work does not address why women and men overall scored differentl­y on these traits — for instance, whether this gender gap is biological or if it is imparted by the culture.

But Hermle said the results do rule out a theory that suggests these personalit­y traits are dictated entirely by genetics and evolutiona­ry biology.

“We find enough variabilit­y across countries to indicate that people respond to the conditions in which they grow up,” he said.

Ultimately, Hermle said, the study highlights the importance of including women in high-level decision making, both in society as a whole as well as in corporate structures.

“Previous work has shown that higher female empowermen­t can improve child welfare and lead to a more democratic decisionma­king process,” he said. “It is important to have a plurality of preference­s represente­d.”

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