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Young men are disadvantaged when applying to female jobs

If men applied for typical ‘female’ jobs, they were significantly less likely to be invited for an interview or asked to provide further information about themselves.

Photo by Andrew Neel from Unsplash.com

It’s not always women who lose out when looking for a job. Men experience disadvantages in hiring processes for female dominated occupations in Germany, the Netherlands, Spain and the US. The reverse is not the case for women who apply for typical ‘male’ jobs. No gender discrimination was found in Norway or the US. These are the findings of a study by the WZB Berlin Social Science Center, the University of Oslo, the University Carlos III of Madrid and the University of Amsterdam. Five European countries and the US were covered in the study.

Women still earn less than men and are less likely to hold management positions. Discrimination against women in hiring processes is often regarded as an important driver of women’s disadvantage in the labor market. However, discrimination is difficult to measure compared across countries, and previous studies have shown different results for different countries.

The study, published in the academic journal European Sociological Review, fills this gap. It is the first cross-national field experiment on gender discrimination in the labor market. The study analyzed employers’ responses to 4,300 applications from fictitious job candidates in six countries (Germany, The Netherlands, Norway, Spain, the UK and the US). Young women and men (22 to 26 years) applied to vacancies in six professions: cook, payroll clerk, receptionist, sales representative, software developer and store assistant.

The researchers found no sign of discrimination against young women in any country and in any of the occupations studied – including male-dominated occupations like software developer. Women were considered more suitable than men for female-dominated occupations. By contrast, male applicants were discriminated against in Germany, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK. In these countries, men were between 5% and 9% less likely to receive feedback on their applications than women.  

Bram Lancee from the University of Amsterdam explains: “If men applied for typical ‘female’ jobs, they were significantly less likely to be invited for an interview or asked to provide further information about themselves.” By contrast, the researchers found no discrimination against male applicants in Norway and the U.S.

“We need to revisit our assumptions that women are always the disadvantaged group” says lead author Gunn Elisabeth Birkelund from the University of Oslo. Moreover, Birkelund expects gender stereotyping to gradually change in the future. “If male-dominated occupations related to the industrial society keep vanishing, and gender-neutral occupations are growing in size, then we would expect gender stereotypes to become less important over time”.

As a limitation, the study only examines the initial stage of the hiring process. “Gender discrimination is evidently more complex than is widely understood, and if we want to combat gender inequality on the labor market we probably need to focus on the later stages of the hiring process” Jonas Radl from the WZB Berlin Social Science Center points out.

Moreover, the applicants were young and had four years of professional experience. The new findings thus do not rule out the possibility that women are discriminated in terms of earnings or promotion later in their careers.

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