Statistical Discrimination or Prejudice? A Large Sample Field Experiment
A model of racial discrimination provides testable implications for two features of statistical discriminators: differential treatment of signals by race and heterogeneous experience that shapes perception. We construct an experiment in the U.S. rental apartment market that distinguishes statistical discrimination from taste-based discrimination. Responses from over 14,000 rental inquiries with varying applicant quality show that landlords treat identical information from applicants with African-American and white sounding names differently. This differential treatment varies by neighborhood racial composition and signal type in a way consistent with statistical discrimination and in contrast to patterns predicted by a model of taste-based discrimination.
Authors: | Ewens, Michael ; Tomlin, Bryan ; Wang, Liang Choon |
---|---|
Institutions: | Carnegie Mellon University, Tepper School of Business |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Statistical Discrimination or Prejudice? A Large Sample Field Experiment
Ewens, Michael, (2013)
-
Statistical discrimination or prejudice? : a large sample field experiment
Ewens, Michael, (2014)
-
Statistical discrimination or prejudice? : a large sample field experiment
Ewens, Michael, (2012)
- More ...