Article

Do Women Contribute More Effort than Men to a Real Public Good?

Ingela Alger, Laura Juarez, Miriam Juarez-Torres, and Josepa Miquel-Florensa

Abstract

This study presents evidence from a lab-in-the-field experiment, conducted in eight small, rural villages in Mexico, in which subjects choose to exert real effort to fund real health centers in their own and other localities. The results show that women are more willing than men to exert effort to fund the health center in another locality, relative to the one in their locality. This gender gap is mostly due to women who have some trust in the way the government spends taxes, and to those who benefit from a government program that targets women and fosters healthcare use. These results also suggest that women might be aware of their higher willingness to exert effort for a public good that does not benefit them directly, compared to men, because they seem to reduce their individual effort the more female their environment is.

Keywords

public goods; gender; lab-in-the-field experiment; real effort; in-versus out-group transfers;

JEL codes

  • C91: Laboratory, Individual Behavior
  • H41: Public Goods
  • O12: Microeconomic Analyses of Economic Development

Reference

Ingela Alger, Laura Juarez, Miriam Juarez-Torres, and Josepa Miquel-Florensa, Do Women Contribute More Effort than Men to a Real Public Good?, The World Bank Economic Review, vol. 37, n. 2, May 2023, p. 205–220.

Published in

The World Bank Economic Review, vol. 37, n. 2, May 2023, p. 205–220