The gender gap in the ownership of promising land

Author:

Chu C. Y. Cyrus1ORCID,Hsu Po-Hsuan2ORCID,Wang Yi-Ting3

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Economics, Academia Sinica, Taipei 11529, Taiwan

2. Department of Quantitative Finance, College of Technology Management, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu 300044, Taiwan

3. Department of Economics, National Taiwan University, Taipei 10617, Taiwan

Abstract

Using millions of observations compiled from the public administrative data of Taiwan, we find a surprising gender inequity in terms of real estate: Men own more land than women, and the annual rate of return (ROR) of men’s land outperform women’s by almost 1% per year. The latter finding of gender-based ROR difference is in sharp contrast to prior evidence that women outperform men in security investment, and also suggests a quantity-and-quality double jeopardy in female land ownership which, given the heavy weight of real estate in individual wealth, has important implications for wealth inequality among men and women. Our statistical analyses suggest that such a gender-based difference in land ROR cannot be attributed to individual-level factors such as liquidity preferences, risk attitudes, investment experience, and behavioral biases, as described in the literature. Rather, we hypothesize parental gender bias—a phenomenon that is still prevalent today—to be the key macrolevel factor. To test our hypothesis, we partition our observations into two groups: an experimental group in which parents can exercise gender discretion, and a control group in which parents cannot exercise such discretion. Our empirical evidence shows that the gender difference with respect to land ROR only exists in the experimental group. For many societies with long-lasting patriarchal traditions, our analysis provides a perspective to help explain gender differences in wealth distribution and social mobility.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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