How Stress Affects Performance and Competitiveness Across Gender

Author:

Cahlíková Jana1ORCID,Cingl Lubomír2ORCID,Levely Ian3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Economics, Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance, 80539 Munich, Germany;

2. Department of Economics, University of Economics in Prague, 130 67 Prague, Czech Republic;

3. Development Economics Group, Wageningen University, 6708 BP Wageningen, Netherlands

Abstract

Because many key career events, such as examinations and interviews, involve competition and stress, gender differences in response to these factors could help to explain the labor market gender gap. In a laboratory experiment, we manipulate psychosocial stress using the Trier Social Stress Test and confirm that this is effective by measuring salivary cortisol level and heart rate. Subjects perform in a real-effort task under both tournament and piece-rate incentives, and we elicit willingness to compete. We find that women under heightened stress perform worse than women in the control group when compensated with tournament incentives, whereas there is no treatment difference under piece-rate incentives. For men, stress does not affect output under competition or under piece rate. The gender gap in willingness to compete is not affected by stress, but stress decreases competitiveness overall, which is related to performance for women. Our results could explain gender differences in performance under competition, with implications for hiring practices and incentive structures in firms. This paper was accepted by Axel Ockenfels, behavioral economics.

Publisher

Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

Subject

Management Science and Operations Research,Strategy and Management

Reference66 articles.

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