Maria Stanfors
Professor
To be or not to be? Risk attitudes and gender differences in union membership
Författare
Summary, in English
Attracting membership while stifling freeriding and heterogeneous preferences among potential members is critical for trade union success. Women are generally seen as less inclined to join trade unions, particularly at the onset of the labor movement. We highlight a previously neglected explanation for this: the importance of risk and gender differences in assessment hereof. We study matched employer-employee data from two industries around the year 1900 where union membership was associated with different levels of risk: the Swedish cigar and printing industries. We find that the gender gap in membership was larger in the high-risk environment (cigar) and smaller in the low-risk environment (printing). Women were not hard to organize but avoided risks and uncertain returns.
Avdelning/ar
- Centrum för ekonomisk demografi
- Ekonomisk-historiska institutionen
Publiceringsår
2016
Språk
Engelska
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
Lund Papers in Economic History. Education and the Labour Market
Issue
144
Fulltext
- Available as PDF - 677 kB
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Dokumenttyp
Working paper
Förlag
Department of Economic History, Lund University
Ämne
- Economic History
Nyckelord
- trade unions
- risk aversion
- gender
- 19th century
- 20th century
- Sweden
Aktiv
Published
Projekt
- The Emergence of Wage Discrimination
- Manufacturing gender inequality