New publication: "Culture and gender differences in honesty"
New paper published in The Economic Journal.
Abstract: Gender differences in preferences play a crucial role in shaping economic outcomes. This study examines cross-societal variation in gender differences in honesty, testing whether they reflect innate traits or are shaped by social norms. Using global experimental and survey data, we find that gender differences in honesty emerge primarily in Western societies, where women report stronger honesty norms than men, while such differences are absent in non-Western societies. Additional evidence shows that gender differences in honesty norms are transmitted across generations and narrow as countries become wealthier. These patterns suggest that gender differences in honesty are better explained by socialization rather than innate traits.
Reference: Graf, C., Pondorfer, A., & Schulz, J. (2026). Culture and gender differences in honesty. The Economic Journal.